Charles Darwin
Darwin's enormous influence on science and culture, begun during his lifetime, is still very evident today. The Origin of Species excited much debate and controversy, challenging the foundations of Christianity, yet underpinning the Victorian concept of progress, and today still evokes powerful and contradictory responses. Yet he was not first to publish evolutionary ideas and his theory of natural selection was not accepted by many of his contemporaries. Peter Bowler's study of Darwin's life and influence combines biography and cultural history. He shows how Darwin's contemporaries were unable to appreciate precisely those aspects of his thinking that are considered scientifically important today. Darwin was a product of his time, but he also transcended it, by creating an idea capable of being exploited by twentieth-century scientists and intellectuals who had very different values from his own.
- Assesses particularly Darwin's influence, unlike conventional biographies
- Emphasises originality of Darwin's later work
- Short - both Desmond and Moore's and Browne's books are about 600 pages
Product details
April 1996Paperback
9780521566681
264 pages
229 × 153 × 18 mm
0.404kg
14 b/w illus. 2 maps
Available
Table of Contents
- General editor's preface
- Preface
- 1. The problem of interpretation
- 2. Evolution before The Origin of Species
- 3. The young Darwin
- 4. The voyage of the Beagle
- 5. The crucial years, London 1837–1842
- 6. The years of development
- 7. Going public
- 8. The emergence of Darwinism
- 9. The opponents of Darwinism
- 10. Human origins
- 11. Darwin and the modern world
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index.