Yesterday noted naturalist and controversial scientist
Charles Darwin died. Mr. Darwin had been in declining health for
several years. He passed at his home in Down (Kent), England.
Darwin was born on February 12, 1809, at Shrewsbury,
England to Dr. Robert Darwin, an eminently successful physician.
Darwin gained notoriety after publication of the book, On Origin
of Species, published November 24, 1859. Darwin began his
academic career studying medicine at the University of Edinburgh, but
soon switched to theology at Cambridge. However, the study of
nature was Darwin's calling. "I was a born naturalist,"
he said of himself. Every aspect of nature intrigued him. He loved
to collect, to fish and hunt, and to read nature books. The country town
of Shrewsbury, population 20,000, was the perfect place for a
"naturalist in training". Darwin's letters and notes
give the impression he devoted more time to collecting, hunting and
riding than to his prescribed studies at Cambridge. Yet he did
well on his examinations, finishing tenth on the list of non-honors
students.
Immediately after graduation Darwin signed on the
H.M.S. Beagle as naturalist and gentleman companion of Captain Robert
FitzRoy. The good captain had been commissioned to survey the
coasts of Patagonia, Tierra del Fuego, Chile and Peru. The Beagle
left Plymouth, England on December 27, 1831 and returned on October 2,
1836. While on the voyage Darwin kept a travelogue(Journal of
Researches) in which he described all the places he visited. One of the
most intriguing stops was the
|
|
the equatorial
Galapagos Islands. Here Darwin studied many unusual plants and
animals. When at sea, Darwin spent time reading academic works
such as Charles Lyell's Principles of Geology which
introduced him to the idea of uniformitarian geology and Jean Baptiste
Lamarck's arguments for evolutionary thinking. After the five year
voyage, Darwin spent his time sorting his collections and sending them
to various specialists to be described.
The results of his voyage, the cataloguing of his
collections, the ideas of other scientists and philosophers, especially
Thomas Malthus's Essay on the Principle of Population, and
Darwin's ability to think critically led him to the most controversial
biological theory ever; evolution by common descent and the principle of
natural selection. However, Darwin was reluctant to publish this
theory. In fact he did not publish it until approached by Alfred
Russell Wallace, who had developed the same theory independently.
Together they announce the theory in 1858 and Darwin's famous book was
published in 1859. If we could look into the future we would see
that the debate started by Darwin goes on and on.
In January 1839 Darwin married his cousin Emma
Wedgewood, and in September, 1842 the couple moved from London to the
village of Down. They had twelve children, 11 of which survive.
The Beagle
|