The article sums up a number of points made by the author concerning the response to Darwinism in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, and repeats the claim that a proper understanding of the theory's impact must take account of the extent to which what are now regarded as the key aspects of Darwin's thinking were evaded by his immediate followers. Potential challenges to this position are described and responded to.
The modern theory of evolution was founded by Charles Darwin, but an overview of the history of evolutionism shows that ideas of the transformation of species predated the publication of his
Origin of Species
in 1859. Various theories of progressive and purposeful change in the organic world had begun to circulate even before Darwin's more radical theory was injected into the debate. Natural selection was regarded as a materialistic idea, and through the late nineteenth century naturalists searched for alternatives that would allow them to believe that the history of life had an ultimate purpose. A complex series of developments in the early twentieth century was needed to create the genetical theory of natural selection accepted by most biologists today.
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