The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection: Or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for LifePenguin UK, 1982. 7. 29. - 480ÆäÀÌÁö With his revolutionary work The Origin of Species Charles Darwin overthrew contemporary beliefs about Divine Providence and the beginnings of life on earth. Written for the general public of the 1850s, it is a rigorously documented but highly readable account of the scientific theory that now lies at the root of our present attitude to the universe. Challenging notions such as the fixity of species with the idea of natural selection, and setting forth the results of pioneering work on the ecology of animals and plants, it made a lasting contribution to philosophical and scientific thought. |
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... animals, and they were abandoned tothemselves and to the circumstancesin whichthey found themselves intheir original station, withoutany superintending power to guide them, they wouldnot so invariably have fixed themselves in the ...
... animals, and they were abandoned tothemselves and to the circumstancesin whichthey found themselves intheir original station, withoutany superintending power to guide them, they wouldnot so invariably have fixed themselves in the ...
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... animals replace one another as one travelled southwards? Why didextinct fossil species show such a close structural relation toliving animals? Above all, why, in the Galapagos islands did the finches and the giant tortoises show slight ...
... animals replace one another as one travelled southwards? Why didextinct fossil species show such a close structural relation toliving animals? Above all, why, in the Galapagos islands did the finches and the giant tortoises show slight ...
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... animals, and learned men were ableto abandon such desperate resorts as that of the College of Gotha,in Germany, in1696, when it had unhelpfully declared that some bones recently discovered nearby were a 'sportof nature',or the scarcely ...
... animals, and learned men were ableto abandon such desperate resorts as that of the College of Gotha,in Germany, in1696, when it had unhelpfully declared that some bones recently discovered nearby were a 'sportof nature',or the scarcely ...
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... animal andvegetable world, from the simplestto the most perfectforms.' Moreover one important pieceofevidence wasstill ... animals', etc.! Butthe conclusions Iam led to are not widely different fromhis,though themeansof change are wholly ...
... animal andvegetable world, from the simplestto the most perfectforms.' Moreover one important pieceofevidence wasstill ... animals', etc.! Butthe conclusions Iam led to are not widely different fromhis,though themeansof change are wholly ...
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... animals which canbe obtainedby selective breedingby man. Againand again the readeris remindedofthe flexibilityin nature introducedbythe occurrence of variationin offspring, and ofthe powerof selection– inthis case byhuman beings –to ...
... animals which canbe obtainedby selective breedingby man. Againand again the readeris remindedofthe flexibilityin nature introducedbythe occurrence of variationin offspring, and ofthe powerof selection– inthis case byhuman beings –to ...
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INTRODUCTION | |
CHAPTER | |
ranging muchdiffused andcommon speciesvary most Species | |
CHAPTER FOUR | |
DIFFICULTIES ON THEORY | |
INSTINCT | |
making instinct Difficulties on the theory of the Natural | |
appearance in the lowest known fossiliferous strata | |
CHAPTER ELEVEN | |
Present distribution cannot be accounted for by differencesin physical conditions Importance of barriers Affinityof the productions ofthe same contin... | |
Distribution of freshwater productions On the inhabitants | |
Difficulties onthe theoryof | |
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