What Darwin Didn't Know
Today's scientists marvel that the 19th-century naturalist's grand vision of evolution is still the key to life
- By Thomas Hayden
- Smithsonian magazine, February 2009, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 5)
Darwin began training to be a physician but didn't have a taste for doctoring, so he moved on to studying for the Anglican priesthood at Cambridge. His real passion, however, was natural history. Shortly after graduation in 1831, he signed on for an unpaid position as a naturalist aboard the Beagle, which was about to embark on a survey of South American coastlines. During the five-year voyage Darwin collected thousands of important specimens, discovered new species both living and extinct and immersed himself in biogeography—the study of where particular species live, and why.
Upon his return to England in 1836, Darwin stayed busy, publishing scientific works on the geology of South America, the formation of coral reefs and the animals encountered during his Beagle expedition, as well as a best-selling popular account of his time aboard the ship. He married his cousin, Emma Wedgwood, in 1839, and by 1842 the growing Darwin family was established at Down House, in a London suburb. Charles, plagued by poor health, settled down with a vengeance.
By 1844, he was confiding in a letter to a fellow naturalist, "I am almost convinced (quite contrary to opinion I started with) that species are not (it is like confessing a murder) immutable." Still, he hesitated to publicize the idea, instead plunging into the study of domestic animal breeding—natural selection, he would argue, is not unlike the artificial selection practiced by a breeder trying to enhance or eliminate a trait—and the distributions of wild plants and animals. He devoted eight full years to documenting minute anatomical variations in barnacles. A prolific letter writer, he sought samples, information and scientific advice from correspondents around the world.
It was a young naturalist and professional specimen collector named Alfred Russel Wallace who finally spurred Darwin to publish. Working first in the Amazon and then in the Malay Archipelago, Wallace had developed an evolution theory similar to Darwin's but not as fully substantiated. When, in 1858, Wallace sent the older man a manuscript describing his theory of evolution, Darwin realized that Wallace could beat him into print. Darwin had an essay he had written in 1844 and Wallace's manuscript read at a meeting of the Linnean Society in London on July 1, 1858, and published together later that summer. Wallace, then on an island in what is now Indonesia, wouldn't find out about the joint publication until October. "There's been an argument about whether Wallace got screwed," says Sean B. Carroll, a biologist and author of books on evolution. "But he was delighted. He was honored that his work was considered worthy" to be included alongside that of Darwin, whom he greatly admired.
This first public airing of Darwinian evolution caused almost no stir whatsoever. But when Darwin published his ideas in book form the following year, the reaction was quite different. On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life soon sold out its first press run of 1,250 copies, and within a year some 4,250 copies were in circulation. Allies applauded it as a brilliant unifying breakthrough; scientific rivals called attention to the gaps in his evidence, including what would come to be known as "missing links" in the fossil record; and prominent clergymen, politicians and others condemned the work and its far-reaching implications. In 1864 Benjamin Disraeli, later Britain's prime minister, famously decried the idea—barely mentioned in Origin—that human beings too had evolved from earlier species. "Is man an ape or an angel?" he asked rhetorically at a conference. "I, my lord, I am on the side of the angels. I repudiate with indignation and abhorrence those newfangled theories."
Darwin had anticipated such protests. "Any one whose disposition leads him to attach more weight to unexplained difficulties than to the explanation of a certain number of facts will certainly reject my theory," he wrote in Origin. But, he also said, "I look with confidence to the future, to young and rising naturalists, who will be able to view both sides of the question with impartiality."
The age of the earth was, for Darwin, a major unexplained difficulty. He recognized that a great deal of time must have been necessary for the world's diversity of plants and animals to evolve—more time, certainly, than the 6,000 years allowed by the leading biblical interpretation of earth's age, but more also than many scientists then accepted. In 1862, the physicist William Thomson (later Lord Kelvin) calculated that the planet was unlikely to be more than 100 million years old—still nowhere near enough time for evolution to have acted so dramatically. "Thomson's views on the recent age of the world have been for some time one of my sorest troubles," Darwin wrote to Wallace in 1869. Further studies, including one by Darwin's son George, an astronomer, fixed earth's age at well under 100 million years.
It wouldn't be until the 1920s and 1930s that geologists, calculating the rates of radioactive decay of elements, concluded that the earth was billions of years old—according to the latest studies, 4.5 billion years. Darwin surely would have been relieved that there was enough time for evolution to have accounted for the great diversity of life on earth.
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Comments (45)
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great work
Posted by sudha on January 16,2013 | 11:59 AM
Very interesting article==wish the article would have mentioned the Barel probability factor of randomly impossible probabilities. And the random probability of DNA code developing. Also, which evolved first RNA or DNA. Additionally, the irreducibly complexity of the eye developing. The very fact that Darwin had no idea of the complexity of the cell. These items would help divert readers from thinking there is of bias reporting.
Posted by John Dady on September 30,2012 | 08:57 PM
What evolution does is give a lot of people, who never learned how to do any useful work, nice financial returns.
Posted by Richard on February 18,2012 | 09:34 PM
My dear friends, after reading all of these coments I must say that there are two points of view. I believe the cosmos is the open space which is infinity it always existed. The universe is the matter within the cosmos which also existed in one form or another. Such as oxygen, hydrogen etc..etc magnetic forces . The universe is the most complete labratory in existance. Science is a fact. Much has been proven. Then there is religion, a belief in the creator. those who believe in this theory and I call it so because there is no proof that it is true. We don't know for sure.We can only go by what someone told us. You cannot put the two together. It's like apples and oranges.
Posted by Louis on December 31,2011 | 07:52 PM
@Robin how is evolution too wonderfull to be true, and is a god figure not too wonderfull to be true? lol there is a difference between religion and god. god is the universe, for the physical human not always understandable. we are heading towards a new age. and in this age we must accept that the god we worship, is just a mythical spin-off from reality. Soon you might understand. i was going to say smoke DMT ( dymethyltryptamine) search it and learn. but you should not take this unless understanding you have been lied to, and lying to yourself. but it is ok. because lying is a form of progress and process, maybe a low form, but you are heading the right way. :)
Posted by dymethyltryptamine on December 29,2011 | 11:11 AM
One of the biggest problems is that Evolutionists are believers to. Nowadays we have the Natural Selection exclusivity, and that is why the evidence of a form of design can't bee explained just by chance. The answer request not GOD but SEX. Sexual Selection is the actor that gives the sensation of design that no one wants to see. For more details please visit my blog here: http://nature-sucks.blogspot.com/
Posted by Rui Monteiro on May 23,2011 | 07:11 PM
Darwin was wrong in saying species can turn into other species...no they don't. And if someone wants to argue this, give an example.
Posted by t on March 19,2011 | 09:57 AM
This comment is to @Vegan_mom and anyone else who wonders about the dearth of viewpoints that allow evolution and creation to coexist - there is a middle ground that fully accepts evolution and science and fully accepts the role of God as Creator of the universe. It's called Evolutionary Creation, and it basically asserts that evolution occurs under the constant guidance of the Creator according to his Purpose and Plan - essentially, the apparently random mutations that are the mechanism for evolution occur under God's guidance according to the laws of physics. Anyways, if you think you'd be interested there is a fantastic book by the evolutionary biologist/theologian Dr. Denis Lamoureax called "Evolutionary Creation: A Christian Approach to Evolution" that's available on Amazon. Here's the link for anyone who's interested: http://www.amazon.ca/Evolutionary-Creation-Christian-Approach-Evolution/dp/1556355815
Posted by Marcus Cunningham on May 19,2010 | 01:55 PM
What did Darwin NOT understand about evolution?
Posted by Helen Jenkins on May 17,2010 | 11:34 AM
Junk science in USA Today March 29th, 2010, page 5D: Why did bugs grow wings to fly? by Dan Verano."Evolutionary biologist may have and answer" (may) "...but the fossil record offers no clues to their origin."...."Wings probably already graced the oldest know insect fossil..." (probably) They also state theories and propose answers, but really do not say with certainty "how or why". Come on guys...give me facts, repeatable scientific evidence, let’s see some real science….not speculation on why bugs grow wings.
Posted by Andy on March 29,2010 | 07:45 PM
I believe in God... Darwin is incorrect. Just read the Bible. God created the heavens and the earth and rested on the 7th day. Everything is too wonderful for it to happen "by chance." Everyone could be a Darwin... if you lined up people and let them each do what Darwin did, you would get multiple theories. Who says Darwin is right? Everyone could have their own experiments and come up with something different. Everything on the earth is a perfect and should just be enjoyed and not dissected apart.. can't we just appreciate the beauty that God gave us? I watched a program on TV that showed that the skull from supposedly a Meanderthal Man, was a con (it was a plaster skull that fooled the experts for decades!) How silly.
Posted by Robin on March 12,2010 | 01:20 AM
Life's Is A Fractal Of The Cosmos Evolution
The Origin, Nature And Mechanism of Life's Evolution
http://www.the-scientist.com/community/posts/list/240/122.page#4668
A. "Should Evolutionary Theory Evolve?"
http://www.the-scientist.com/article/display/56251/
Some biologists are calling for a rethink of the rules of evolution.
B. Life's evolution is a fractal of the cosmos evolution
Dear Bob Grant, you can extend the list of evolution theorists and the descriptions of their theories, but IMO none of them will survive into the 22nd century. Just wait and see.
Life is just one of many forms of mass in the universe, All of which are forms of energy. Life's evolution is a fractal of the cosmos evolution. It is so plain and simple, therefore unbelievable in view of the immense mountains of verbiage about it. The origin, nature and mechanism of life's evolution is the origin, nature and mechanism of the evolution of mass formats in the cosmos. So plain and simple that it hurts, it's embarassingly clear.
C. Take a peek at the Evolution Theory of the future. Brace yourself at the realization of its obviousness and simplicity. Start the search at the three brief basic English notes listed below.
Dov Henis
(Comments From The 22nd Century)
Updated Life's Manifest May 2009
http://www.the-scientist.com/community/posts/list/140/122.page#2321
28Dec09 Implications Of E=Total[m(1 + D)]
http://www.the-scientist.com/community/posts/list/184.page#4587
Cosmic Evolution Simplified
http://www.the-scientist.com/community/posts/list/240/122.page#4427
Posted by Dov Henis on January 14,2010 | 03:16 AM
Agreed
Posted by Kenneth on January 2,2010 | 01:45 PM
This program is pretty good but I do have a nit to pick. At the beginning of the program, the narrator claims that birds are descended by dinosaurs, and in the middle the same claim is repeated. And yet, there is not one shred of evidence that was presented to support that proclamation. In fact, it is ironic that the narrator should make that claim because recent developmental evidence (the exact sort of evidence that is highlighted in this program) actually shows that birds are unlikely to have descended from dinosaurs. The early embryos of birds show the brief appearance of digits 1 and 5 before these limb buds disappeared in the later stages of the bird embryos. This is similar to the gill slits found in human embryos. The gill slit shows that humans evolved from an aquatic animal, a fish, and the fingers 1 and 5 of bird embryos show that birds evolved from a pentadactyl ancestor, contradicting the dinosaurian origin of birds. The theropod dinosaurs had fingers 1-2-3. They are tridactyls. Birds have fingers 2-3-4 and they evolved from a pentadactyl ancestor with fingers 1-2-3-4-5. Not only did the program's creator failed to present this important new piece of evidence, but he/she falsely implies that this particular NOVA program provides evidence to support the discredited dinosaurian origin of birds. Overall though, the program was a good introduction to evolutionary biology, but it is just too bad that the creator/writer of this particular program appears to be biased in favor of the dinosaurian origin of birds. If Darwin knew about the embryological evidence of the digital identity of bird fingers and the paleontological evidence that theropod dinosaurs had fingers 1-2-3, he would have rejected the dinosaurian origin of birds. :)
Posted by Cal King on December 31,2009 | 11:51 PM
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