Charles Darwin did not invent the theory of evolution. That idea had been around for a long time because it is an obvious truth, no matter what anyone tells you who does not believe in science. Darwin was the inventor of evolution through natural selection. Even that idea was being discovered by Alfred Russel Wallace. And Darwin's theory has gone through a few centuries of rigorous scientific scrutiny. So please stop with the nonsense for those who still have not caught on.
The young Darwin apparently loved to shoot animals. He was quite the snipe hunter. Maybe it helped him to take an interest in nature.
Darwin learned early in life to be wary of disclosing his scientific discoveries to others. The biologist Robert Grant (1793-1874) stole some of his findings about oysters. But it was Grant who spoke to him about "evolution" based on the theories of the French scientist Jean-Baptiste Lamarck (1744-1829). It was a great shock for the young Darwin.
"I did not then in the least doubt the strict and literal truth of every word in the Bible."--Charles Darwin.
"Considering how fiercely I have been attacked by the orthodox, it seems ludicrous that I once intended to be a clergyman."--CD.
"My mind has been since leaving England a perfect hurricane of delight & astonishment."--CD.
Darwin's finches is the term used to what is believed gave Darwin the clue to natural selection. But it was not until he returned to England that he understood the significance of those birds.
In July 1836, he made his first sketch of an evolutionary tree in secret with the words written nearby: "I think. . . " How beautiful is that.
"Man in his arrogance thinks himself a great work, worthy the interposition of a deity. More humble and I believe true to consider him created from animals."--CD.
Darwin's "favourite child" Annie died at age 9. It is believed he had very little use for any God talk after that.
Darwin believed that even the human eye as complex as it is could be explained through natural selection. He showed how the most simple of beginnings--a nerve sensitive to light--could be seen as one end of a long chain of developments in optics.
"A bench of bishops is the devil's flower garden."--CD.
Samuel Wilberforce, the bishop of Oxford, was described by Disraeli as "unctuous, oleaginous, saponaceous," leading to his nickname Soapy Sam.
Thomas Huxley championed Darwin's cause before both scientific and religious crowds and became "Darwin's bulldog."
Darwin also spoke of "sexual selection." The female picks the red colored male just like my wife likes a particular tie on me.
Carl Lorenz called Darwin the "patron saint" of psychology.
I love that Darwin condemned the Victorian fad for spiritualism and seances as nothing more than confidence tricks and parlor games.
Darwin was buried at Westminster Abbey, an embarrassing reminder that he was never honored in life by the state. I visited his grave and am a total admirer of him.
In 1915, Elizabeth Reid, also known as Lady Hope, wrote an article for a Baptist newspaper in which she claimed to have visited Darwin before his death and he begged her for forgiveness and recanted his theories. The story is total nonsense and exists to this day.
When Darwin saw an orchid from Madagascar, he predicted a moth existed that had an 11-inch proboscis to get at the nectar. Sure enough, in 1903, the moth was found.
"Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge: it is those who know little, and not those who know much, who so positively assert that this or that problem will never be solved by science."--CD. What a great quote to end on in these troubled times.