Charles Darwin and the Impact of his Evolution Theory

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It was early summer in 1831 when English naturalist Charles Darwin set sail on the H.M.S. Beagle for four years to survey the Galapagos Islands and Tahiti. It is known that on this trip, Darwin would begin trying to understand how species came to be where they were living, and how they had evolved to their present condition. However, the initial interest in this trip was, by his own admission, to see an active volcano. So, how did it come to be that this exciting exploration led a young man of 22 to spend the next thirty years of his life trying to convince the world that there was more to their existence than their idea of “Creation?”
Charles Darwin was born on February 12 1809. He was the son of a trusted physician in Shrewsbury, England. When Darwin was 13 years old, he and his brother Erasmus set up a chemistry lab in the garden of his childhood home. It was during this time that Charles developed a fondness for scientific experimentation. Soon after this, Erasmus left home and went to study medicine at Cambridge University. It was a well known fact among the Darwin sons that they be educated in medicine, just as their grandfather and father were. This did not seem to be playing out too well for young Charles Darwin, as he set off for medical school in 1825. Not only did the sight of blood scare him, but he also found that studying medicine was not nearly as exciting for him as it was his ancestors before.
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In what could arguably be considered the spark that stirred Charles, he met a young freed slave from Guyana, South America, John Edmonstone, who taught him the art of taxidermy. The two of them would talk for hours about preserving animals and John would tell stories of the beautiful tropical rainforests where...

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... way the world looked at natural history.
Up until this point in our history, the majority of people were under the impression that the world was created by a divine spark. That God himself touched the Earth and created all things, from the birds and trees to the oceans and mountains. What Charles Darwin was starting to figure out was that there was a lot more to it than that. He believed from very early on that the land forms rose up from the oceans and that all the living things inhabiting them very slowly adapted to these changes and evolved. Another discovery that was intriguing to Darwin was the discovery of fossilized monkeys in Africa. To Charles this basically proved that mankind was some sort of descendent from an ape ancestor. However, he kept this thought to himself for the time being because such accusations at the time would have been considered heresy.

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