Darwin's Private Papers Get Released To The Internet 237
bibekpaudel writes "ScienceDaily reports that a wealth of papers belonging to Charles Darwin have been published on the internet, some for the first time. Some 20,000 items and 90,000 images were posted today to http://darwin-online.org.uk/. The new site is the largest collection of Darwin's work in history, according to organizers from Cambridge University Library 'This release makes his private papers, mountains of notes, experiments, and research behind his world-changing publications available to the world for free,' said John van Wyhe, director of the project. The collection includes thousands of notes and drafts of his scientific writings, notes from the voyage of the Beagle when he began to formulate his controversial theory of evolution, and his first recorded doubts about the permanence of species."
How fitting... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:How fitting... (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:How fitting... (Score:4, Funny)
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I can't believe anyone would be so f*@king stupid as to believe natural selection makes greed justifiable. I'd also like to point out that social darwinism has also been used to justify that whi
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Read some Nietzsche. Learn about existentialism, perspectivism, nihilism. Questions on the existence of meaning in a world devoid of objective truth have already been asked and answered a countless times over throughout the ages.
My story? As a teenager (unversed in philosophy), I reached the same point as Kierkegaard's "Young Man":
How did I get into the world? Why was I not asked about it and why was I no
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What is the underpinning for any morality at all everything exists for reasons other than chance? You seem to be assuming that having a creator somehow necessarily means that there is objective morality. I don't see why that should be the case.
Even if it is the case that the lack of a creator means that there is no objective morality, does it follow that there necessarily must be a
So... (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:So... (Score:5, Funny)
Survival (Score:5, Insightful)
"It is not the strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent that survives. It is the one that is the most adaptable to change."
--Charles Darwin
Re:Survival (Score:5, Funny)
A little off-topic, but this just looks like the epitaph on the RIAA's grave
Re:Survival (Score:5, Insightful)
It is a pity really that many people have fallen in the social interpretation of Darwin's theory and more than once we have seen ugly consequences of that.
Re:Survival (Score:5, Insightful)
The only question was how organisms transferred traits to their offspring, and this has since been answered to the professed satisfaction of even the creationists. Genetic passage of traits is indisputable, and evolution is a straightforward corollary.
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Not really. (Score:5, Interesting)
I'd therefore rewrite the last piece to say something like "those with an ability to adapt most closely aligned with the pressure to adapt at that time, including those pressures exerted by changes within the pressure to adapt". Well, except that it's longer, less succinct, and less obvious in meaning to those not already familiar with the idea of evolution.
It's not really a tautology. It's recursive and reversible (and therefore provable by induction from first principles) but the statement isn't necessarily true simply because of itself, mostly because "adapt" does not have a constant definition.
Re:Survival (Score:5, Insightful)
Some Creationists still pretty much deny anything but some sort of weak microevolution, insisting that species (or "kinds", a favorite term because it's so weakly defined) are the direct creation of God. Others are willing to accept a certain amount of macro-evolution, often simply by enlarging "kinds" into a nebulous grouping that can be as big as "birds" and "fish", but always with humans being completely separate from any other group, regardless of any genetic, developmental and morphological relationship that you can point out.
The one key thing that seems to unite virtually all Creationists is a rejection of humans as being a product of any evolutionary process. It seems to boil down, for them, to denial of the "specialness" of humans, and in their minds to be descended from an ape-like animal is an affront to their religious and moral beliefs.
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Even among the "Intelligent Design" crowd (well, the less fanatical part), "Intelligent Design" is basically "guided evolution". It's not that there is no evolution, but they hold the belief that certain 'irreducable complexities' in some structures (Which, to my knowledge, all of the examples they give have been reduced to lower complexities
Re:Survival (Score:5, Informative)
What you're invoking appears to be a private definition. Theistic evolutionists (which is what I would count most Catholic theologians) are explicitely not included in this category, because they do not deny any of the above things, but rather add a sort of "guiding" force principle. YOu will find, almost to a man, that Creationists deny not only evolution beyond the species/kinds level, but expressely deny any sort of universal common descent (all organisms having a common ancestor) and specifically that humans are, in fact, simply a relatively hairless, bipedal ape.
As to Intelligent Design advocates, what they believe is cleverly altered depending on who they're talking to. If they talk to someone who accepts evolution, they don't deny the underlying principles of biological evolution, but rather, like theistic evolutionists, invoke some sort of prime mover/grand tinkerer. Inevitably, when they're talking to a Creationist crowd, they pretty much become Special Creationists. That's because ID (as opposed to Theistic Evolution) is a political movement, one of the key constructs of the infamous Big Tent, which is supposed to unite Special Creationists (Young Earth and Old Earth Creationists and everything in between) and Theistic Evolutionists. For the most part, Theistic Evolutionists, including many Catholic thinkers (save for a notable few like Cardinal Schoenborn) have not entered the ID camp, so, other than a small number like Michael Behe, you're dealing with Special Creationists.
So, to put the long to short, when discussing evolution, the title "Creationist" is usually confined to variants on Biblical Literalist Special Creationists (though it also includes Muslim Creationists and other groups that make similar anti-evolutionary claims). It does not include Theistic Evolutionists, who, for the most part, reject the Creationist tenets and have refused to enter the Big Tent alongside these individuals and to lend credence to what is clearly a legalistic attempt to get by the First Amendment.
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No other species has screwed up like humans.
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A scientific theory is not just a hypothesis you come up with at 3am after having had a couple of beers. Scientific theories are constantly tested and examined.
Any theory that is able to survive testing and questioning as long as Darwin's, is truly fit for survival.
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I've heard people dispute it, some have said it was Lamarck that said it.
If that's the case... (Score:2)
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Re:If that's the case... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:If that's the case... (Score:4, Interesting)
And it goes on, make the sendmail person switch to postfix. The CVS expert switch to Subversion., etc etc.
My experience leads me to believe that almost nobody hates change more than many IT professionals. Presumably because it means more hassles and work in a job where many are already overworked, maybe?
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This quote is quaint, and is often repeated on the web, but I see no record of it in "The Origin of the Species" or anywhere on the referenced Darwin site or in any other reliable source. Wikiquote claims that it's a misattribution. [wikiquote.org]
"survival of the fittest" is a vacuous tautology. (Score:2, Insightful)
"It is not the strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent that survives. It is the one that is the most adaptable to change."
--Charles Darwin
And how do we measure "the one most adaptable to change"? Why it is whichever one survives, of course. Because of this definition it is not possible to falsify the claim that "the best-adapted ones survive". Imagine that we set out to corrupt an expirment which tries to prove, over a thousand years, that the best-adapted animals survive. The experimenters create a biodome out of an area of New Zealand and proceed to raise the temperature to 120 degrees. Then they wait a thousand years.
If the thousand
Re:"survival of the fittest" is a vacuous tautolog (Score:3, Insightful)
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Re:"survival of the fittest" is a vacuous tautolog (Score:3, Insightful)
You'd be just as well off stating that scientists are laboring under some misapprehension of causality.
Besides, you think that the scientists haven't been watching through the windows for that thousand years?
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"It is not the strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent that survives. It is the one that is the most adaptable to change."
--Charles Darwin
OK, -1 Flamebait, I probably deserve it
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Specifically, adaptability to change is only useful if there is a change in the environment which requires adaptation. If the environment is relatively stable from generation to generation (e.g. 10k years of savannah), being properly adapted is beneficial, but being adaptable in general is not.
Or perhaps I am mis-parsing the quote. It sounds like he
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Actually, that's a load of crap. Pure, pure crap. Assume an environment where changes are small and strength affords a huge advantage. In such a circumstance, the minor changes are just noise and the physically stronger species get their genes into next generations better, in direct contradiction of the "most adaptable" principle.
Actually it's not crap, although it is not really something Darwin ever said. Your example above is true only for the geologically short period of time where the environment remains stable. Change always comes, sooner or later. When the environment changes, your example species must either change with it or become extinct. Some species retain a great deal of genetic variability, while others do not.
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Suppose a species has some stronger members, but b
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Theory as in...a hypothesis that has accumulated enough evidence to be regarded as true. You need to learn your terminology better.
Sorry, no. It means the proof *IS* there. If it wasn't, it'd still be a hypothesis.
What about it?
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How does it feel to demonstrate your stupidity and conceit all at once?
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The Bible was given all the respect and care and consideration as an explanatory model of how things happened. It was tested and found wanting. Among the results of those tests are things like modern geology, astronomy, and evolutionary theory.
You act as if it has been all evolution all the time for all of recorded history. The realit
Controversial? (Score:5, Insightful)
Maybe it was controversial back then, but it sure as heck isn't now (not in civilised parts of the world, anyway). Should have phrased that "his then-controversial theory" - might have been a less controversial turn of phrase!
Daniel
Re:Controversial? (Score:5, Insightful)
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I have no problem with the Wyhe quote, however, since the context of the sentence refers to the time period when the theory was first being proposed, when it was actually controversial.
Re:Controversial? (Score:4, Insightful)
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No, but it does allow dismissing opposing|differing opinions as meritless because they *are* meritless.
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I guess you weren't watching when the CNN moderator asked the republican presidential candidate contenders to raise their hands if they thought that the theory of evolution was incorrect.
oh wait, you said 'civilized world'... never mind.
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Your Assertion: For all civilized parts, people = white
Counter point:
In parts of the US, evolution controversy = yes.
Those parts people = mostly white.
Thus your assertion creates a contradiction.
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On a side note, yes, if you take the criteria traditionally associated with the "civilized world" (UN human development index, per-capita incomes, various economic development indices, low corruption levels etc), and select countries according to those, then you do invariably see that most countries on the resulting list have white-majority populations, even for the more exclusive definitions of "white". Though I'm still not sure how that fact is relevant to the G-...-P's comment.
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Truth is truth regardless of points of view. Open discussions are great but science still places a large emphasis on empirical evidence. When it comes to evolution you can find the evidence everywhere. Half the time the evidence is found lying on he ground.
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Darwin to file DMCA C&D Notice. (Score:3, Funny)
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I wonder how much the theory has changed (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:I wonder how much the theory has changed (Score:5, Interesting)
Darwin did get some things run. Most obvious was the means of heredity. He was not aware of Mendel's work. In fact, Mendelian genetics pretty much eclipsed Darwinian selection early in the 20th century. That, not Natural Selection, was the origin of a lot of the Social Darwinist/Eugenics movements; the application of barnyard selective breeding to humans, something that's quite opposed to Darwin's fundamental point that species could become better adapted to their environments naturally, whereas eugenics/social darwinism was more in the mode that a species needed active improvement, because the natural state was towards degradation.
That's why Expelled and all those nuts out there trying to associate Darwin's theory with the eugenics movement and with Nazi race theory are completely off base. Darwin's theory is in opposition the very idea that a population's reproduction needs to be rigorously managed (as a farmer would do) for a "better" (which, in Darwinian selection, is always a relative, statistical view, and not an absolute one as it was with the eugenics proponents) species.
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Which is pretty much what I said [slashdot.org] in a discussion about 'Expelled'. It's propaganda, pure and simple.
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I'm wondering, first of all, how much it's really changed
At the time, Darwin didn't know about any of the actual mechanisms that enabled the transmission of genes, he just inferred that they must exist via statistics. Since then, we've discovered DNA, and it confirmed most of his findings. We've been able to use population genetics to figure out what route humans took to initially expand to all the continents [wikipedia.org], and everything else that the actual mitochondrial/nucleic DNA mechanisms taught us.
Did you RTFA? (Score:3, Funny)
I'll assume this means that no one read the article before posting, although that isn't anything new.
I can't say this enough.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Just 100 years ago, maybe less, you would have had to be someone very special to see this much information from one scientist, and most probably have to be vested in whatever answers or information can be gleaned from it.
Now, however, the Internet allows us ALL to enjoy the privilege of reading his works, notes, and seeing his drawings... for free, at will, at home.
If knowledge is power, this is some really powerful stuff. Forget listening to anyone tell you what he said, just look it up in HIS notes. I wonder how many college papers were written about Darwin and the fallout from this information to date? Wonder what future papers will look like?
The Internet, for all its down sides, is a great thing....
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spluff! (Score:5, Funny)
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The sister project Darwin Correspondence Project [darwinproject.ac.uk] provides access to the letters Darwin wrote, including those describing his own views on science and religion.
According to someone close to the project, one of their hopes is that by opening up Darwin's letters to the public and showing how he took a moderate and considerate approach in his own correspondence, we can move away from the invective-filled polar
Wow, that's a lot of stuff (Score:5, Funny)
Wow, quite a feat. Must have taken some really intelligent design to put all that together and make it work.
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I'm sure Antranig Basman (the technical director) will feel duly complimented! And he has fairly strong views on "reasonable design", in webapps anyway: Reasonable Server Faces [cam.ac.uk]. (Ah, any excuse to gratuitously advertise a colleague's work!)
Controversial? sad... (Score:5, Insightful)
The theory of evolution through natural selection, while it has been modified to more accuracy through advances in genetics and our understanding of environmental science and ecology, is one of the best supported theories that science has to offer about how ANYTHING works. It's up there with things like "Ohm's Law" (E=IR), Newton's Laws of Gravity and/or Einstein's Theories of Relativity, the kinetic theory of gases, etc.
People don't question the scientific understanding about what makes our computers, mobile phones, PDAs, microwaves, etc. work, yet they still have issues with evolution, despite the fact that it is all based on EXACTLY THE SAME scientific method (in a nutshell, "observe - question - hypothesize - test - analyze - repeat") as the those things. It really boggles the mind.
I'm not saying the theory of evolution should not be questioned. ALL SCIENCE should be questioned, periodically even, but it should be questioned scientifically (i.e. does my hypothesis fit the data better, and can I devise a test to show this?) But, is it really so hard to accept the idea that we may not be "God's gift to the universe" and are only as important as we make ourselves to be, rather than relying on some higher power, some creator to make us the most important thing around? Honestly, and I grew up with religion, it is a concept that I can no longer understand (and I doubt I ever understood it in the first place)...
What is it? Fear that there may be nothing but what we leave behind after we die? Fear that if we are the product of an unimaginable amount of interactions over a difficult to imagine number of years and nothing more than that? Is it hubris? Fear that we may share the same ancestors as gorillas and orangutans?
Why is the theory of evolution still a controversy? As far as science goes, there is no other hypothesis that even comes close to explaining biology as well. How can so many people (and, honestly, mainly in the United States) still reject at most and at least question based on unscientific ideas -- i.e. not based on the scientific method -- the theory of evolution?
I have no problems with the idea of questioning the theory of evolution, if you can do it on scientific grounds. But doing otherwise is the same (to me) as questioning gravity, electronics, chemistry, etc. If one can accept those things, then why is evolution so hard to accept?
Re:Controversial? sad... (Score:5, Insightful)
Given the now known existence of DNA & mechanisms of genetic variation, the tautology "the fittest survive" points out that evolution HAS to occur.
variation + the fittest survive + hereditory traits => successive generations become fitter
How could they possibly NOT become fitter (evolve)?!!
Speciation is similarly unavoidable. Population genetic drift comes about by interbreeding, so lack of interbreeding will lead to diverging sub-population genetics, and there is nothing to stop this proceeding past the no-turning-back (speciation!) point of no longer being able to interbreed.
Some of the reasons why some people find it hard to accept are :
- It's personal - it clashes with their religious beliefs
- It's personal - it clashes with their egotistical belief of being special, not an animal
- Evolution of large animal species happens to slowly to observe, and most people are not familiar with other forms of evolution (e.g bacterial, or genetic design) that do happen observably quickly
- It's taught horribly in schools. When you are taught properly about population speration and genetic drift, environmental change and punctuated equilibrium, speciation as evolution past the point of inability to interbreed, it makes sense. If you instead believe evolution happens to individuals vs populations, or that all genetic changes are claimed to be incrementally beneficial (vs punctuated equilibrium, or even Lamarkian drivel like giraffe's necks getting longer because of their stretching for leaves, then you will be very confused!
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No offense, but did you actually read that paper? I don't think that it says what you think it says.
I appreciate the link, but I was looking for a source for your specific claims like the "3 generations" claim and the claim about "simultaneous" mutation.
Micro vs. Macro is fiction (Score:4, Insightful)
You live for maybe 70 years, yet you have a hard time with the idea that several MILLION years ago, humans and chimpanzees had a common ancestor?
Hell, we are close to speciation of dogs. Though still genetically compatible, it shouldn't be hard to argue that St. Bernards and Chihuahuas are reproductively isolated. If we could both be around to see the outcome, I would bet on complete reproductive genetic isolation within a few thousand years, i.e. speciation, or what you want to call "macro-evolution".
Scientifically show me that there is indeed a distinction between your so-called "micro-" and "macro-evolution", and I will be willing to accept the evidence. Otherwise, SCIENCE has shown, repeatedly, that there is no real distinction.
Separating evolution into "micro-" and "macro-" is just another red herring from those unwilling to question their own beliefs about their own importance to the universe, as I mentioned above.
Organisms change over time, due to a number of genetic and environmental factors. This is a FACT. The mechanisms of it are a theory (which is as close to truth as science can get). Why is it difficult for you to believe that, over enough time, things will change so much as to be incompatible (reproductively speaking)?
You may proceed with your laughter AFTER you refute what I have said with EVIDENCE.
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So how are you measuring information? You seem to have these quantities all nailed down, but th
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HTH.
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Re:Micro vs. Macro is fiction (Score:4, Informative)
Cambrian explosion "problem"?
Are you claiming that experts in biology are positing a gene transfer mechanism not found in vertebrates as an explanation for rapid changes in vertebrates?
Not at all. I think that you're missing the point of punctuated equilibrium.
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Just a single question to demonstrate the gap:
How could clay transform into living tissue and monkey cannot transform to become more human?
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Theory of Evolution vs ID (Score:5, Insightful)
The problem with evolution is that it requires an amount of critical thinking to understand, and while subtle, the nuances are easily exploited by the cynical against the theory itself.
The "Ben Steins" of the world mystify me. I can't believe someone is so evil to purposefully make an argument they know to be false against science. I can't also believe that he is so stupid as to believe ID.
And yes, ID supporters, ID is stupid. It isn't science. It is religion, and "god did it" is not a valid scientific theory. ID is to biological science what "circle squaring" is to mathematics.
Evolution is a proven fact. Organisms change with their environment. This is irrefutable. The "Theory" of evolution is the hows, whys, and over all path that organism A has taken to become what it is.
In science, we seek to understand the hows, whys, and path better.
Just in time (Score:2, Interesting)
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There are no monsters, there are no monsters, there are no monsters....
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Re:Expelled (Score:4, Funny)
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Can you believe such barbaris
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Also, the God theory of the origin of species had a wide open shot on an empty field for two or three thousand years and never scored any explanatory points, so claims of not getting a fair shot are disingenuous.
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Ben Stein and the other semi-literate creationist nutjobs
Wait. Did you just say Ben Stein is a creationist? Damn. That guy's so smart. How could he be so dumb?
You're confusing the character(s) he plays with the actual man. Don't.
;)
I'm a fan of Stein's work (movies, speechwriter for Nixon, his late great show Win Ben Stein's Money and his books), but I've never believed he is MENSA material.
Despite the fact Stein is involved with this joke of a movie, I will continue to enjoy his body of work.
And Visine. Oh, man, I love Visine.
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I have enjoyed some of Stein's work as well, but I tend to agree. He seems like the type of guy who would rather be the smartest guy in a room full of half-wits than actually engage in serious debate.
I do have to say that my favorite contribution of his was his "open letter" to Paul Krugman about his remarks about James Tobin, accusing Krugm
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You must be new here. images.google.com is your friend.
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http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/faq-speciation.html [talkorigins.org]
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The only thing (for the recent past and foreseeable future) derived from monkeys is more monkeys.
If you intended to say that we and monkeys are derived from a common ancestor which, most likely, more closely resembled a monkey than us, I'm with you.
Or were you just making a joke about Homo sapiens slashdotiens?
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