Darwin: A Life in ScienceOne of the most intriguing aspects of the story that unfolds in these pages is the seeming contradiction between the conventional surface of Charles Darwin's life and the revolutionary implications and effects of theories that placed him in fierce conflict with the scientific community and the religious establishment of his day. An indifferent university student seemingly destined for a career in the Church, he was transformed by a five-year scientific voyage around the world into a totally committed scientist consumed by the question of the history of the earth and the development of life upon it. An eminently respectable Victorian husband and father, plagued by ill health and pained by domestic tragedy, he was drawn step-by-step into painstaking research, and almost against his will into publishing Origin of Species, a book that would earn him both vilification and immortality. An heir to the remarkable independent intellectual tradition of his distinguished family, he was still profoundly discomforted by the censure of a society that forced him to defend his ideas against often vicious attacks. But above all, Charles Darwin was a part of a history of ideas beginning with the ancient Greeks and continuing to the present with the latest breakthroughs in molecular biology. |
Contents
Unsettled Youth | 1 |
Evolution before Darwin | 27 |
The Beagle | 49 |
Copyright | |
15 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
animals Autobiography barnacles beaks became become began cell century changes Chapter Charles Darwin Charles Lyell continued coral Creation creatures Cuvier Darwin's ideas Darwin's theory Darwinian death Descent Despite developed died early Earth Edinburgh Emma Emma's England Eras Erasmus Darwin establishment evolution by natural evolutionary fact father final FitzRoy FitzRoy's fossil Francis Francis Darwin friends Galápagos Islands geological Henslow Hooker human Huxley illness individual intellectual interest islands John Bowlby John Gribbin John Murray Journal Lamarck later letter living London Lyell Mendel Mivart months natural history natural selection naturalist never Origin of Species Owen pangenesis paper peas plants problem produced publication published realised Robert rocks scientific scientist Shrewsbury Shrewsbury School South America successful summer survival theory of evolution took travelling trip uniformitarian Variation visited voyage Wallace Wallace's Wedgwood Wilberforce writing wrote X Club