



Charles
Darwin Memorial
Darwin, Charles
Robert (1809-1882), British scientist, who laid the foundation of modern
evolutionary theory with his concept of the development of all forms of
life through the slow-working process of natural selection. His work was
of major influence on the life and earth sciences and on modern thought
in general.
Born in Shrewsbury, Shropshire, England, on February 12, 1809, Darwin
was the fifth child of a wealthy and sophisticated English family. His
maternal grandfather was the successful china and pottery entrepreneur
Josiah Wedgwood; his paternal grandfather was the well-known 18th-century
physician and savant Erasmus Darwin. After graduating from the elite school
at Shrewsbury in 1825, young Darwin went to the University of Edinburgh
to study medicine. In 1827 he dropped out of medical school and entered
the University of Cambridge, in preparation for becoming a clergyman of
the Church of England. There he met two stellar figures: Adam Sedgwick,
a geologist, and John Stevens Henslow, a naturalist. Henslow not only helped
build Darwin's self-confidence but also taught his student to be a meticulous
and painstaking observer of natural phenomena and collector of specimens.
After graduating from Cambridge in 1831, the 22-year-old Darwin was taken
aboard the English survey ship HMS Beagle, largely on Henslow's recommendation,
as an unpaid naturalist on a scientific expedition around the world.
Voyage of the Beagle
Darwin's job as naturalist aboard the Beagle gave him the opportunity
to observe the various geological formations found on different continents
and islands along the way, as well as a huge variety of fossils and living
organisms. In his geological observations, Darwin was most impressed with
the effect that natural forces had on shaping the earth's surface.
At the time, most geologists adhered to the so-called catastrophist
theory that the earth had experienced a succession of creations of animal
and plant life, and that each creation had been destroyed by a sudden catastrophe,
such as an upheaval or convulsion of the earth's surface (see Geology:
History of Geological Thought: 18th and 19th Centuries). According to this
theory, the most recent catastrophe, Noah's flood, wiped away all life
except those forms taken into the ark. The rest were visible only in the
form of fossils. In the view of the catastrophists, species were individually
created and immutable, that is, unchangeable for all time.
The catastrophist viewpoint (but not the immutability of species) was
challenged by the English geologist Sir Charles Lyell in his two-volume
work Principles of Geology (1830-33). Lyell maintained that the earth's
surface is undergoing constant change, the result of natural forces operating
uniformly over long periods.
Aboard the Beagle, Darwin found himself fitting many of his observations
into Lyell's general uniformitarian view. Beyond that, however, he realized
that some of his own observations of fossils and living plants and animals
cast doubt on the Lyell-supported view that species were specially created.
He noted, for example, that certain fossils of supposedly extinct species
closely resembled living species in the same geographical area. In the
Galapagos Islands, off the coast of Ecuador, he also observed that each
island supported its own form of tortoise, mockingbird, and finch; the
various forms were closely related but differed in structure and eating
habits from island to island. Both observations raised the question, for
Darwin, of possible links between distinct but similar species.
Theory of Natural Selection
After returning to England in 1836, Darwin began recording his ideas
about changeability of species in his Notebooks on the Transmutation of
Species. Darwin's explanation for how organisms evolved was brought into
sharp focus after he read An Essay on the Principle of Population (1798),
by the British economist Thomas Robert Malthus, who explained how human
populations remain in balance. Malthus argued that any increase in the
availability of food for basic human survival could not match the geometrical
rate of population growth. The latter, therefore, had to be checked by
natural limitations such as famine and disease, or by social actions such
as war.
Darwin immediately applied Malthus's argument to animals and plants,
and by 1838 he had arrived at a sketch of a theory of evolution through
natural selection (see Species and Speciation). For the next two decades
he worked on his theory and other natural history projects. (Darwin was
independently wealthy and never had to earn an income.) In 1839 he married
his first cousin, Emma Wedgwood, and soon after, moved to a small estate,
Down House, outside London. There he and his wife had ten children, three
of whom died in infancy.
Darwin's theory was first announced in 1858 in a paper presented at
the same time as one by Alfred Russel Wallace, a young naturalist who had
come independently to the theory of natural selection. Darwin's complete
theory was published in 1859, in On the Origin of Species. Often referred
to as the "book that shook the world," the Origin sold out on the first
day of publication and subsequently went through six editions.
Darwin's theory of evolution by natural selection is essentially that,
because of the food-supply problem described by Malthus, the young born
to any species intensely compete for survival. Those young that survive
to produce the next generation tend to embody favorable natural variations
(however slight the advantage may be)-the process of natural selection-and
these variations are passed on by heredity. Therefore, each generation
will improve adaptively over the preceding generations, and this gradual
and continuous process is the source of the evolution of species. Natural
selection is only part of Darwin's vast conceptual scheme; he also introduced
the concept that all related organisms are descended from common ancestors.
Moreover, he provided additional support for the older concept that the
earth itself is not static but evolving.
Reactions to the Theory
The reaction to the Origin was immediate. Some biologists argued that
Darwin could not prove his hypothesis. Others criticized Darwin's concept
of variation, arguing that he could explain neither the origin of variations
nor how they were passed to succeeding generations. This particular scientific
objection was not answered until the birth of modern genetics in the early
20th century (see Heredity; Mendel's Laws). In fact, many scientists continued
to express doubts for the following 50 to 80 years. The most publicized
attacks on Darwin's ideas, however, came not from scientists but from religious
opponents. The thought that living things had evolved by natural processes
denied the special creation of humankind and seemed to place humanity on
a plane with the animals; both of these ideas were serious contradictions
to orthodox theological opinion.
Later Years
Darwin spent the rest of his life expanding on different aspects of
problems raised in the Origin. His later books-including The Variation
of Animals and Plants Under Domestication (1868), The Descent of Man (1871),
and The Expression of the Emotions in Animals and Man (1872)-were detailed
expositions of topics that had been confined to small sections of the Origin.
The importance of his work was well recognized by his contemporaries; Darwin
was elected to the Royal Society (1839) and the French Academy of Sciences
(1878). He was also honored by burial in Westminster Abbey after he died
in Downe, Kent, on April 19, 1882.
See also Evolution.
Contributed by:
Randy Bird
Garland E. Allen
"Darwin, Charles Robert," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 97 Encyclopedia. (c)
1993-1996 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
