Evolution: The Remarkable History of a Scientific Theory"There is a grandeur in this view of life, that, whilst this planet has gone cycling on according to the fixed law of gravity, from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being, evolved." - Charles Darwin In this brisk and deeply erudite history of one of the greatest single ideas of all time, a Pulitzer Prize winning science historian takes us from evolution's theoretical antecedents in the emerging paleontology and fossil-mania of the early 19th-century to Dar- win's (and Wallace's) brilliant breakthrough and its consequences; from the discovery of "the secret of life" (the double-helix) to the theory's greatest triumph: the modern synthesis. Larson attends throughout to social context: the social and philosophical earthquake that was the French Revolution; the devel- opment, in England, of a laissez-faire capitalism sympathetic to a Darwinian ethos (with adherents typically putting plucky Englishmen atop the evolutionary ladder); the emergence of Social Darwinism and the dark science of eugenics against a back- drop of industrial revolution; the American backlash against evolutionism that culminated in the Scopes Trial; and on to today, with the pendulum gradually swinging from "nurture" to "nature" once more. Telling his story through the lives and careers of the scientists who constitute it, Larson introduces us to a host of biologists, innovators, eccentrics, and explorers, among them Cuvier, Galton, Wallace, Erasmus Darwin, Huxley, Morgan, Mendel, De Vries, Crick and Watson, EO Wilson, and so many more. Rivalries, fierce competition for the highest stakes, brilliant solutions to seemingly-unsolvable mysteries (such as the mystery of inheritance), and the constant danger of religious backlash inform an account with no dull moments. Both celebrated as one of mankind's crowning scientific achievements and reviled as a threat to the most cherished human values, "Darwin's dangerous idea," over 200 years, wholly transformed humankind's view of life, religion, origins, and itself, and remains controversial, especially in the United States (where a full 40% of Americans do not subscribe to the full Darwinian vision). There is a lot of new material in this book. Amazingly for a book of short compass, it is also definitive: no major figure or intel- lectual current is omitted. This is a book that will raise the science IQ of readers while taking them on an exhilirating journey. Praise for Larson's previous books: "Evolution's Workshop beautifully presents the variation of human thinking about scientific problems. I can't remember another book I found as stimulating. It is a must not only for evolutionists (I have learned a great deal from it) but for ever philosophically inclined naturalist." Ernst Mayr |
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Contents
A GROWING SENSE OF PROGRESS | 27 |
ON THE ORIGINS OF DARWINISM | 53 |
ENTHRONING NATURALISM | 77 |
ASCENT OF EVOLUTIONISM | 103 |
MISSING LINKS | 131 |
GENETICS ENTERS THE PICTURE | 151 |
APPLIED HUMAN EVOLUTION | 175 |
AMERICAS ANTIEVOLUTION CRUSADE | 199 |
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Common terms and phrases
acquired characteristics adaptive Agassiz Alfred Russel Wallace American animals anti-evolution apes appeared Beagle became believed biblical biologists biology breeding Britain British Buckland Cambridge century Charles Darwin Christian chromosomes concept creation creationist Darwin wrote Darwin's finches Darwinian Darwinists Dobzhansky earth environment Ernst eugenics evidence evolutionary thought evolutionism evolutionists evolved Fisher forms fossil record Francis Galton Galápagos Galápagos Islands genes Genesis genetic geologic Georges Cuvier Gould Haeckel Haldane Hamilton hereditary heredity hominid human evolution Huxley's Ibid individual inheritance Islands Lamarck Lamarckian later living Mayr Mendel Mendelian modern synthesis mutations Natural History natural selection naturalists organic evolution Origin of Species Owen paleontologists plants popular population progress race religion religious reptiles scientific scientists Sedgwick Sewall Wright Social Darwinism sociobiology T. H. Huxley teaching theory of evolution tion traits types University Press variations Vries William Jennings Bryan Wilson Wright York