Introduction: The Two Sides of Darwin Part One The Charles Darwin We Think We All Know 1 A Primer of Evolution’s Complexities 2 What Time Selected from Darwin: The Standard View Part Two Charles Darwin and the Static Worldview 3 The Tree That Hides the Forest: Charles Darwin’s “Tree of Life” 4 Divergence: A Geometry That Shatters Creative Time and Novelty 5 A Cyclical World in Equilibrium 6 Natural Selection: The Core of Darwin’s Theory? Part Three Charles Darwin Viewed in Piecemeal Fashion 7 When So-Called New Ideas Hide Old Ones Conclusion: Back to the Future Index
Contrary to prevailing contemporary perceptions of Charles Darwin and his work, this book reveals a more nuanced picture, presenting him as a man of his time who struggled to reconcile the received wisdom of an unchanging natural world with his new ideas of evolution.
Richard G. Delisle holds a PhD in paleoanthropology and a PhD in philosophy. He is associate professor at the University of Lethbridge, Canada where he teaches evolution and history/philosophy of science at the School of Liberal Education, being also affiliated with the Department of Philosophy. He is the founder and editor of the book series "Evolutionary Biology: New Perspectives on its Development" with the academic publisher. He is the author of Debating Humankind's Place in Nature, 1860-2000: The Nature of Paleoanthropology (2007) and of Charles Darwin's Incomplete Revolution: The Origin of Species and the Static Worldview (2019), among other publications. James Tierney studied Philosophy and French at the University of Michigan and Philosophy at the University of Chicago, USA. He is currently Senior Lector and Director of Yale English Language Programs at Yale University, USA. As part of the founding board of the Consortium on Graduate Communications, he organized its first Summer Institute at Yale University (in 2017) and is active in research and advocacy in the field of advanced language learning at the graduate level. He has also worked as a freelance editor and translator since 2005.
The book shows that biology, especially evolutionary biology, is a
dynamic and extremely exciting field and that there is much left to
be discovered by the next generations of biologists. It delves
deeply into Darwin’s Origin of Species as well as into the paradigm
prevailing during his time.
*Alexander Czaja, Evolution: International Journal of Organic
Evolution*
Delisle and Tierney have immersed themselves in the text of On the
Origin of Species like few, if any, before. This is a highly
original, critical, yet sympathetic deconstruction of the Darwin
idolatry that has dominated biological evolution theory for
decades.
*Nicolaas Rupke, Professor of the History of Science, University of
Göttingen, Germany and Washington and Lee University, USA*
A much-needed deconstruction of the ‘Darwin Legend’, that is, the
seemingly irresistible temptation of many modern readers to read
their own ideas back into On the Origin of Species, and to make
Darwin an ahistorical icon, or the father figure of an even more
ahistorical ‘Darwinism’.
*Antonello La Vergata, Professor of the History of Philosophy,
University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, Italy*
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