Ridley Chapter 1
History of evolutionary ideas --- Part 1, before Darwin

Part 2, History of evolutionary ideas after Darwin
510 index page

Evolution is a theory with a bumpy history.  That history brings with it much baggage, in the form of ideas, words, and controversies that continue to shape discussion of evolution today.  So we begin by looking at that history, not just out of respect for the workers that have gone before but because understanding that history can illuminate important current difficulties.

BRIEF OUTLINE (hyperlinks to expanded outline; use "back" button to return)

EXPANDED OUTLINE
  • The "new" science of geology
  • Charles Darwin, of course, introduced our modern view of evolution with his Origin of Species in (1859).  We shall consider the evidence, ideas and arguments that led Darwin to his theory when we discuss Chapter 3 and Chapter 4 in upcoming classes.

  • Continued in Chapter 1, part 2 , History of evolutionary ideas after Darwin

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    Recent items of relevance to this chapter:

    Stephen Jay Gould, "A division of worms / The use and disuse of Lamarck", Natural History, February 1999 (to be continued in the March issue).
    An extended essay on Lamarck's contributions, going well beyond the standard textbook caricature.

    Richard Milner, "Charles Darwin and Associates,Ghostbusters", Scientific American, October 1996.
    An interesting article on the fad of spiritualism in Britain in the late 1800s, discussing Darwin's and Wallace's opposite roles.

    Stephen Jay Gould, "Writing in the margins", Natural History, November 1998, and "Capturing the center", Natural History, December 1998.
    A two-part essay on Antoine-Laurent Lavoisier and geology in the late 1700s, shortly before the French Revolution in which he was executed.  Lavoisier, you will recall from high school chemistry, was the great French chemist who discovered oxygen. Here we learn about Lavoisier's important contributions to geology as well.

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    Readable references: (also note end-of-chapter references in Ridley)

    John A. Moore (1993)  Science As a Way of Knowing.  The Foundations of Modern Biology.  Harvard University Press.
    An elegantly written book on the nature of science, with sections on ancient worldviews and evolution (relevant here) as well as genetics and development.

    Loren Eiseley (1958)  Darwin's Century:  Evolution and the Men Who Discovered It.  Doubleday.
    A scholarly but eloquent discussion of people and ideas associated with evolution in the 1800s.

    Ernst Mayr (1982)  The Growth of Biological Thought.  Diversity, Evolution, and Inheritance.  Harvard University Press
    A thorough, insider's view of the history of some central ideas in biology.  Discusses diversity, evolution and genetics both before and after Darwin.

    John McPhee (1998)  Annals of the Former World.  
    About geology rather than evolution, including commentary on the history of ideas relating to the earth's history.  Elegant, entertaining prose by a much-acclaimed writer.  This volume is a compiliation of several earlier works, In Suspect Terrain, Basin and Range, Rising from the Plainsand Assembling California.  Reviewed in Science 282:885 (30 October 1998).
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    SIUC / College of Science / Zoology / Faculty / David King / ZOOL 510
    URL: http://www.science.siu.edu/zoology/king/510/mr01a.htm
    Last updated: 6-Jan-2000 / dgk