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A338    Book:     Glick, Thomas F. 1982. Darwin en España. Barcelona: Col. Libros de Bolsillo 574, Ediciones Peninsula.   Text   Image   PDF
A Study in the Evolution of Man, Londres, 1900. 3. Darwin, Charles: Origen de las especies. Traducido por Enrique Godinez de la sexta edición inglesa. Madrid, 1877. 4. Haeckel, Ernst: Anthropogenie, 2 tomos, Leipzig, 1891. 5. —: Biologische Studien, Tomo I, Leipzig, 1870. 6. — :Die Weltratsel, Bonn, 1900. 7. —: Essais de psychologie cellulaire, París, 1880. 8. —: Generelle Morphologie der Organismen, Berlín, 1886. 9. —: Last Words on Evolution, Londres, 1906. 10. —: Natürliche Schópsfungs
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A2955    Pamphlet:     Freeman, R. B. 1982. Darwin and Gower Street: an exhibition in the Flaxman Gallery of the Library, University College London, Monday 19 April 1982. London: UCL.   Text   PDF
Case - OTHER WORKS ON EVOLUTION Almost all Darwin's other books bear some relation to his ideas on evolution, but the three which are, with related matter, contained in this case do so most closely. 52. [1839] (1968) 'Questions about the breeding of animals'. 4to, [?London, ?Richard Taylor] Facsimile, London, Society for the Bibliography of Natural History. Sherborn Fund Facsimile No. 3. Introduction by Sir Gavin de Beer. Darwin used the unsatisfactory method of collecting scientific information
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A338    Book:     Glick, Thomas F. 1982. Darwin en España. Barcelona: Col. Libros de Bolsillo 574, Ediciones Peninsula.   Text   Image   PDF
, Quadrangle Books, 1969; Thomas F. Glick, Dar-winism in Texas, Austin, Humanities Research Center, 1972; Suzanne Cameron Linder, William Louis Poteat and the Evolution Controversy, «North Carolina Historical Review», 40, 1963, pp. 135-157; y Maynard Shipley, The War on Modern Science: A Short HiUory of the Fundamenta-list Attacks on Evolution and Modernism, New York, Knopf, 1927. 2. Clifford H. Peterson, «The Incorporation of the Basic Evolutionary Concepts of Charles Darwin in Selected American College
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A338    Book:     Glick, Thomas F. 1982. Darwin en España. Barcelona: Col. Libros de Bolsillo 574, Ediciones Peninsula.   Text   Image   PDF
Rationalist's Manual, Londres, Watts, 1897. 2. Allen, Grant: The Evolution of the Idea of God (An Inquiry into the Origins of Religión), Londres, 1897, 357-358. 3. Benn, Alfred William: The History of English Rationalism in the Nineteenth Century, Londres, Longman's, 1906, passim. 4. Bérenguer-Feraud, L.-J.-B.: Superstitions et sur-vivances, París, E. Léroux, 1896, 26, 271. 5. Bithwell, Richard: A Handbook of Scientific Agnosticism, Londres, Watts, 1892, 440. 6. Conway, Moncure D.: Farewell Discourses
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A338    Book:     Glick, Thomas F. 1982. Darwin en España. Barcelona: Col. Libros de Bolsillo 574, Ediciones Peninsula.   Text   Image   PDF
14. Huxley, T. H.: Evolution and Ethics, Londres, 1895. 15. —: Science and the Christian Tradition, Londres, 1895, passim. 16. —: Science and the Hebrew Tradition, Londres, 1895. 17. Ingersoll, R. G.: Essays ands Lectures, 3 tomos, Londres, Progressive Publishing Co., 1891, 234, 331, 424, 446, 448. 18. King, John H.: The Supernatural: Its Origin, Nature and Evolution, 2 tomos, Londres, Williams and Norgate, 1892. 19. Lang, Andrew: Magic and Religión, Londres, Longmans, 1901, 282, 356, 361, 369
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A338    Book:     Glick, Thomas F. 1982. Darwin en España. Barcelona: Col. Libros de Bolsillo 574, Ediciones Peninsula.   Text   Image   PDF
González, La Biblia y la ciencia, 2 vols., Madrid, 1891; 2. ed., Sevilla, Izquierdo, 1892. 104. J. A. Zahm, Evolution and Dogma, Chicago, D. H. McBride, 1896, pp. 359-362. Zahm también leyó a Mir. Evolution and Dogma fue traducido al castellano con el título La evolución y el dogma, trad. Miguel Asúa, Madrid, Sociedad Editorial Española, 1905. 105. Sobre el evolucionismo de Arintero, cf., Sanus Abad, «Apologética española», pp. 23-32, y Alvaro Huerga, La evolución: Clave y riesgo de la aventura
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A338    Book:     Glick, Thomas F. 1982. Darwin en España. Barcelona: Col. Libros de Bolsillo 574, Ediciones Peninsula.   Text   Image   PDF
3. Glick, Darwinism in Texas, p. 25 n. 4. 4. Russell T. Newman, «Texas Baptists and the Evolution Controversy, 1920-1929», tesis inédita, Baylor University, 1954. 5. En este punto he seguido el análisis particularmente lú cido de Gatewood, Preachers, Pedagoques and Politicians, pp. 5-8. 6. Enrico Catellani, «II processo di Dayton e la liberta di pensiero», Nuova Antología, 6.a ser., 243, 1925, p. 73. 7. Newman, «Texas Baptists», p. 61, citando a The Fort Worth Record, Nov., 71, 1922. 8. El
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A2955    Pamphlet:     Freeman, R. B. 1982. Darwin and Gower Street: an exhibition in the Flaxman Gallery of the Library, University College London, Monday 19 April 1982. London: UCL.   Text   PDF
was still at Edinburgh when Darwin was up and they were both active members of the Plinian Society, collecting together, particularly on the shores of the Firth of Forth. He did some good work then, especially on sponges, but, as Darwin wrote, 'he did nothing more in science, a fact which has always been inexplicable to me'. T. H. Huxley wrote later of him 'I met nobody, except Dr Grant, of University College, who had a word to say for evolution and his advocacy was not calculated to advance the
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A2955    Pamphlet:     Freeman, R. B. 1982. Darwin and Gower Street: an exhibition in the Flaxman Gallery of the Library, University College London, Monday 19 April 1982. London: UCL.   Text   PDF
islands any of them came, nor indeed did Darwin note the facts in all cases. The twelve lines above, which make up Darwin's first: independent published paper, is all that he was able to say at the meeting about 'Darwin's finches' which were to loom so large later in discussions on evolution in islands. [F1644]. 38. 1838 Darwin, Charles, editor. 'The zoology of the voyage of H.M.S. Beagle' etc. Volume I, part I, number 1. Richard Owen 'Fossil Mammalia, 4to, London, Smith Elder. Issued February
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A2955    Pamphlet:     Freeman, R. B. 1982. Darwin and Gower Street: an exhibition in the Flaxman Gallery of the Library, University College London, Monday 19 April 1982. London: UCL.   Text   PDF
'second' on the title page, nevertheless this one is called 'third'. It was extensively revised and contains a table of differences between it and the edition of 1860, a type of table which was to appear in all subsequent editions. Some of Darwin's critics had complained that he had not sufficiently considered his predecessors in the general theory of evolution and he added an historical sketch to cover this. This sketch, in an earlier and shorter form, had already appeared in the fourth New York
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A2955    Pamphlet:     Freeman, R. B. 1982. Darwin and Gower Street: an exhibition in the Flaxman Gallery of the Library, University College London, Monday 19 April 1982. London: UCL.   Text   PDF
57. 1871 'The descent of man, and selection in relation to sex'. [First edition, first issue.] 8vo, 2 volumes, London, John Murray. Darwin had avoided the logical outcome of the general theory of evolution, bringing man into the scheme, for twelve years and had been preceded in 1862 by T. H. Huxley's Man's place in nature. The two parts of the book are almost separate, although the last chapter does discuss sexual selection in man. The first issue, of 2,500 copies, came out on 24 February and
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A338    Book:     Glick, Thomas F. 1982. Darwin en España. Barcelona: Col. Libros de Bolsillo 574, Ediciones Peninsula.   Text   Image   PDF
frecuente en las revistas británicas de los años sesenta. Cf. Alvar Ellegard, Darwin and the General Reader: The Reception of Darwin's Theory of Evolution in the British Periodical Press, 1859-1872, Góteborg, Elan-ders Boktryckeri Aktiebolag, 1958, pp. 238-241. Creo que estos grabados no son originalmente españoles, aunque tampoco parecen de procedencia inglesa. 3. Benito Pérez Galdós, Obras completas, 6 vols., Madrid, Aguilar, 1950, V, Í4. Cf. Leo J. Hoar, Jr., Benito Pérez Galdós y la Revista del
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A86    Periodical contribution:     Sulloway, Frank J. 1982. The Beagle collections of Darwin's finches (Geospizinae). Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History) Zoology Series 43, no. 2: 49-94.   Text   Image   PDF
, Georgia: Georgia Southwestern College. — In press. The Origins of Darwin's Finches. Trans. S. Diego Soc. nat. Hist. Sulloway, Frank J. 1982a. Darwin and His Finches: The Evolution of a Legend. J. Hist. Biol. 15 : 1-53. — 1982b. Darwin's Conversion: The Beagle Voyage and Its Aftermath. J. Hist. Biol. 15 : 325-88. Sundevall, Carl J. 1871. On Birds from the Galapagos Islands. Proceedings of the Scientific Meetings of the Zoological Society of London, pp. 124-30. Swarth, Harry S. 1931. The Avifauna of
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A86    Periodical contribution:     Sulloway, Frank J. 1982. The Beagle collections of Darwin's finches (Geospizinae). Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History) Zoology Series 43, no. 2: 49-94.   Text   Image   PDF
Introduction The Geospizinae, or 'Darwin's finches', have inspired an impressive body of scientific research ever since Charles Darwin first collected these birds during the voyage of H.M.S. Beagle (1831-36). As a miniature paradigm of evolution in action, the Geospizinae have few ornithological rivals, and they are rightly celebrated today as a classic case of adaptive evolutionary radiation. Largely responsible for this special scientific status of Darwin's finches is the famous laboratory
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A86    Periodical contribution:     Sulloway, Frank J. 1982. The Beagle collections of Darwin's finches (Geospizinae). Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History) Zoology Series 43, no. 2: 49-94.   Text   Image   PDF
species, Swarth concluded that some evolution in bill size must have occurred since Darwin's visit. Darwin also reported taking specimens of the smaller-billed G. [magnirostris] strenua on Chatham Island, and these specimens as well have generally been thought to have come from James Island (Fig. 3)6. David Lack, who at first agreed with the judgment of Swarth and others7, later changed his mind, given Darwin's testimony that only the specimens from the first two islands had been mingled together
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A86    Periodical contribution:     Sulloway, Frank J. 1982. The Beagle collections of Darwin's finches (Geospizinae). Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History) Zoology Series 43, no. 2: 49-94.   Text   Image   PDF
Finches. Bull. Br. Orn. Club 60 : 46-50. — 1945. The Galapagos Finches (Geospizinae): A Study in Variation. Occ. Pap. Calif. Acad. Sci., no. 31. — 1947. Darwin's Finches: An Essay on the General Biological Theory of Evolution. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. — 1963. Mr. Lawson of Charles. Am. Scient. 51 : 12-13. — 1969. Subspecies and Sympatry in Darwin's Finches. Evolution 23 : 252-63. Lafresnaye, Frédéric de 1840. Lettres sur les oiseaux de MM. Léclancher et Neboux. Revue Zoologique 3
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A86    Periodical contribution:     Sulloway, Frank J. 1982. The Beagle collections of Darwin's finches (Geospizinae). Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History) Zoology Series 43, no. 2: 49-94.   Text   Image   PDF
Species'. For the Galapagos as a whole, Gould pronounced 25 of the 26 land birds as new and distinct forms found nowhere else in the world. Darwin was frankly stunned, not only by the realization that three separate species of mockingbirds indeed inhabited the different islands of the Galapagos, but also by the fact that most of these Galapagos species, even though new, were closely related to those found on the American continent19. His conversion to the theory of evolution, which took place
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A303    Book:     Freeman, R. B. 1984. Darwin Pedigrees. London: printed for the author.   Text   Image   PDF
, whilst the Palaeontographical Society produced the British fossils, again in two volumes, in the same years. The Ray Society volumes are still useful today, one hundred and thirty years later, but, more importantly, they taught Charles the procedures and limitations of taxonomic methods, lessons which were to stand him in good stead when he presented his views on evolution to the scientific world. The story of Charles' relationship with Alfred Russel Wallace and the coincidence of their views has
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A303    Book:     Freeman, R. B. 1984. Darwin Pedigrees. London: printed for the author.   Text   Image   PDF
Erasmus' enduring love of gardens, resulted in his production of The Botanic garden (1791, 1789), an allegorical and didactic poem which was much read at the time, although its heavy pomposity laid it open to easy parody. His name is best known today for his early contribution to the theory of evolution; this he gave in his Zoonomia (1794-1796) and in his posthumous poem The Temple of nature (1803). He certainly believed that all life forms had come about through evolutionary change from the simplest
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A303    Book:     Freeman, R. B. 1984. Darwin Pedigrees. London: printed for the author.   Text   Image   PDF
to describe it for the press and wrote up the general results, as well as the geological observations, himself. It was during this time also that he was beginning to jot down his earliest thoughts on evolution. On 11th November 1838, he proposed marriage to his first cousin Emma Wedgwood and was accepted. Emma was the ninth and youngest child of his mother's brother Josiah and had been named after her mother's sister Emma Allen. The name had become rare in England until the popularity of
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