Happy Darwin Day, everyone! Today is the 202nd birthday of one of the greatest men in science, Mr. Charles Darwin (also, oddly enough, the birthday of Abraham Lincoln). It is hard to overstate the importance of Darwin in all of modern life; his theory changed the world, changed not just biology but endless other branches of science and led to the creation of countless other branches. Few others can claim to have changed the way we view the world like Darwin can, and for a person so modest and retiring as he this is especially something.
Yet while the scientific community has overwhelmingly accepted Darwin and his great theory, outside of the bastions of scientific thought the majority in this country reject evolution and its implications, worried that somehow it is a threat to their religion, their morals or cherished notions of what humans are. These are unfounded fears. Evolution is no threat to God or religion and makes no claims about morals except perhaps to wonder at what point in our long journey they developed.
Instead, evolution opens us up to a wider picture, a grand view of life and its creatures that speaks to our interconnectedness, how in a very real sense all life is related through a common ancestor. What could be more wonderful than this?
On Darwin Day, I ask that you put aside your reservations, accept what science is telling us in the knowledge that in no way should it conflict with your faith. Let go of your fears, and come along with us on the great journey of science, still in the process of imagining the new world that Darwin first discovered.
Yet while the scientific community has overwhelmingly accepted Darwin and his great theory, outside of the bastions of scientific thought the majority in this country reject evolution and its implications, worried that somehow it is a threat to their religion, their morals or cherished notions of what humans are. These are unfounded fears. Evolution is no threat to God or religion and makes no claims about morals except perhaps to wonder at what point in our long journey they developed.
Instead, evolution opens us up to a wider picture, a grand view of life and its creatures that speaks to our interconnectedness, how in a very real sense all life is related through a common ancestor. What could be more wonderful than this?
On Darwin Day, I ask that you put aside your reservations, accept what science is telling us in the knowledge that in no way should it conflict with your faith. Let go of your fears, and come along with us on the great journey of science, still in the process of imagining the new world that Darwin first discovered.
That's nice. I'm not sure that he discovered this, but he certainly popularized it. I've heard of other scholars who have published some obscure works before him who have at least hinted on the subject, but I can't say that I remember who they were. Prof. R.M.F. said something about some ancient Grecian aswell, though his name alludes me.
ReplyDeleteI would still credit him as being the "Father" of this science, however, much like I would consider our good friend from Halicarnassus the "Father of History."