Article ID: CBB001500027

Evolution in a fully constituted world: Charles Darwin's debts towards a static world in the Origin of Species (1859) (2014)

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Delisle, Richard G. (Author)


Endeavour: Review of the Progress of Science
Volume: 38, no.3-4
Issue: 3 - 4
Pages: 197-210
Publication date: 2014
Language: English


Publication Date: 2014
Edition Details: Part of the Special issue on Charles Darwin and Scientific Revolutions.

The Transformist Revolution was a long intellectual quest that has expanded from the 18th century to today. One area of inquiry after another has confronted the necessity of recasting its object of study under an evolutionary view: human history, geology, biology, astronomy, etc. No single scholar fully managed to make the transition from a static worldview to an evolutionary one during his or her own lifetime; Charles Darwin is no exception. Many versions of evolutionism were proposed during this revolution, versions offering all sorts of compromises between old and new views. Not sufficiently acknowledged in the historiography is the profoundness of Darwin's debts towards the old static view. As a dual child of the Scientific Revolution and natural theology, Darwin inherited key concepts such as stability, completeness, timelessness, unity, permanence, and uniformity. Darwin took these concepts into consideration while erecting his theory of biological evolution. Unsurprisingly, this theory was ill-equipped to embrace the directionality, historicity, and novelty that came along with a new evolutionary world. This paper analyses a fundamental idea at the heart of Darwin's Origins of Species (1859) inherited from a static, stable, and machine-like conception of the world: the notion of a fully constituted world. Although in principle antithetical to the very idea of evolution itself, Darwin found a way to `loosen up' this notion so as to retain it in a way that allows for some kind of evolutionary change.

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Article Delisle, Richard G. (2014) Can a Revolution Hide Another One? Charles Darwin and the Scientific Revolution. Endeavour: Review of the Progress of Science (pp. 157-158). unapi

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Authors & Contributors
Bellon, Richard
Blumenthal, Geoffrey
Bowler, Peter J.
Chamizo, José A.
Chang, Hasok
Continenza, Barbara
Journals
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences
Annals of the History and Philosophy of Biology
Biology and Philosophy
Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society
Endeavour: Review of the Progress of Science
Foundations of Chemistry
Publishers
Columbia University
Prometheus Books
Springer
State University of New York Press
University of California Press
University of Pittsburgh Press
Concepts
Evolution
Revolutions in science
History as a discipline; chronology; study of the past
Biology
Darwinism
Philosophy of science
People
Darwin, Charles Robert
Copernicus, Nicolaus
Aristotle
Carlyle, Thomas
Fraassen, Bas C. van
Freud, Sigmund
Time Periods
19th century
20th century
18th century
17th century
20th century, late
21st century
Places
Great Britain
France
Netherlands
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