Charles Darwin: The Origin Of Species

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Caitlin Holford                                                                Page         

6/15/2009

Charles Darwin and The Origin of Species

The following essay will cover how Charles Darwin had to write his book in a way as to not offend the beliefs of people at the time.

In Britain, in 1859 there were 750 000 (Richard, J. no date. "Looking at History: Roman Catholicism 1800-1850) people who believed in creationism so this made it much more difficult for Darwin to transfer his theory without severe repercussions. These repercussions were usually letters of criticism from the public and his peers, however there were some violent acts against him because he was questioning their most profound belief.

 There were 3 groups of biologists who were the main critics of Darwin’s the Origin of Species, these being the Lamarkians, the Vitalists, and the early Mendelians.

“The Lamarkians and the Vitalists rejected the idea of natural selection as too materialistic and as giving insufficient weight to will and effort and other psychological forces. Whilst the early Mendelians who were fascinated by the discovery of genetic units (gene differences) with large effects (such as hornlessness in cattle) wanted to make mutation responsible for positive evolutionary change and so only believed in natural selection to get rid of negative and harmful variants” (Darwin, C. 2003. the Origin of Species.  United States: Penguin Group). Meaning that the Lamarkians believed that species lost parts of them that they didn’t need, the Vitalists believed that species were created separately whilst Darwin clearly states “that species had not been independently created, but had descended, like varieties, from other species” (Darwin, C. 2003. the Origin of Species.  United States: Penguin Group) And that the early Mendelians only believe in it to accept mutation for positive changes only.

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Due to these three different facts, we can see that whatever Darwin wrote, he would offend the beliefs of someone, somewhere in England. As he says in his book, “No one can feel more sensible than I do of the necessity of hereafter publishing in detail all the facts, with references, on which my conclusions have been grounded; and I hope in a future work to do this.” (Darwin, C. 2003. the Origin of Species.  United States: Penguin Group)

The critics “proved” to Darwin that he was wrong because through their own studies they found that the earth was no ...

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