Darwin's Origin of Species: A BiographyAtlantic Monthly Press, 2007 - Всего страниц: 174 Charles Darwin's foremost biographer, Janet Browne, delivers a vivid and accessible introduction to the book that permanently altered our understanding of what it is to be human. A sensation on its publication in 1859, The Origin of the Species profoundly shocked Victorian readers by calling into question the belief in a Creator with its description of evolution through natural selection. And Darwin's seminal work is nearly as controversial today. In her illuminating study, Browne delves into the long genesis of Darwin's theories, from his readings as a university student and his five-year voyage on the Beagle, to his debates with contemporaries and experiments in his garden. She explores the shock to Darwin when he read of competing scientist's similar discoveries and the wide and immediate impact of Darwin's theories on the world. As one of the launch titles in Atlantic Monthly Press' "Books That Changed the World" series, Browne's history takes readers inside The Origin of the Species and shows why it can fairly claim to be the greatest science book ever published. |
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... perhaps be associated with the rise of science as a leading fea- ture of Victorian society . Much can also be linked with the spread of middle - class economic and political values through the era . Perhaps too , despite all the ...
... perhaps be associated with the rise of science as a leading fea- ture of Victorian society . Much can also be linked with the spread of middle - class economic and political values through the era . Perhaps too , despite all the ...
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... Perhaps after the robust good health of the Beagle voyage , Darwin could never truly let go . By the time of his death , the whole family were almost pro- fessional invalids , plagued by weak pulses , nausea , chronic debilities ...
... Perhaps after the robust good health of the Beagle voyage , Darwin could never truly let go . By the time of his death , the whole family were almost pro- fessional invalids , plagued by weak pulses , nausea , chronic debilities ...
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... perhaps unique in his grasp of both practical detail and philosophical vision . Like Darwin , he concluded that a new species might develop if a variant group of organisms was geographically isolated in some way from its parent ...
... perhaps unique in his grasp of both practical detail and philosophical vision . Like Darwin , he concluded that a new species might develop if a variant group of organisms was geographically isolated in some way from its parent ...
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A theory by which to work | 35 |
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Controversy | 84 |
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