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Charles Darwin's Last Theory Of Natural Selection

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Charles Darwin
Weed out the idiots. Known for his theories about the evolution of mankind and the process of natural selection, this British naturalist set the foundation for the scientific explanation of evolution. Charles Darwin is the famed naturalist who shook the scientific world to its core, causing experimental ripples in the fields of geology, anthropology, and even paleontology (Birx). Darwin’s theories of evolution are that evolution had occurred and is still occurring, evolutionary change is a gradual change, the primary evolution process is natural selection, and that all life forms came from one common organism. Notably, Darwin’s last theory is his most controversial as it caused an uproar in the general public, and in the ideology …show more content…

Darwin was born on February 12, 1809 in Shrewsbury, England. It is no surprise that Charle darwin became a great scientist for he came from a long line of great scientists. His father was a medical doctor and Darwin’s grandfather was a renowned botanist (a scientist in the study of plants). Darwin was born to wealth and academic privilege thus setting him up for great discoveries. Darwin was naturally a fan of exploring nature which can be solidified by one of his quotes “The love for all living creatures is the most noble attribute of man” (qtd in “Charles Darwin Quotes”). So Darwin became a naturalist after rejecting hi father’s dreams of Charles becoming a doctor or parson. From the beginning, Charles Darwin was set up to discover wonders (Charles …show more content…

Charles Darwin’s discoveries are attributed to his trip to the Galapagos islands on the voyage named The Beagle (Coyne). Because of the rationality of Darwin’s work the scientific community accepted his theories which Darwin further back up with five additional manuscripts on his theory of natural selection, common ancestry, and his concepts of speciation and evolution which can be summed up by a famous quote of his, “It is not the strongest of the species that survive, nor the most intelligent, but the one most responsive to change” (qtd in “Charles Darwin Quotes”). The religious community took special offense to Darwin’s work in the sense that his theories directly challenged the biblical theory of creation. To counter the acceptance of Darwin’s theories, religious leaders would translate the seven days of creation with geologic time

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