Rheas, mockingbirds, and the "creation" of evolution

The ideas of evolutionary change and natural selection were two extraordinary contributions of 19th-century science to culture and society. Charles Darwin formalized the first idea from some outstanding antecedents and entirely invented the second one, although he delayed the publication of both. So...

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Autores principales: Marone, L., de Casenave, J.L.
Formato: JOUR
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Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00733407_v24_n2_p65_Marone
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spelling todo:paper_00733407_v24_n2_p65_Marone2023-10-03T14:53:27Z Rheas, mockingbirds, and the "creation" of evolution Marone, L. de Casenave, J.L. Charles darwin Creativity Data Evolution Hypothesis Hypothetical-deductive method Induction Natural selection Science teaching Theory Rhea Rheiformes The ideas of evolutionary change and natural selection were two extraordinary contributions of 19th-century science to culture and society. Charles Darwin formalized the first idea from some outstanding antecedents and entirely invented the second one, although he delayed the publication of both. Some of Darwin's own comments gave rise to the impression that he deferred publication because he remained summarizing information and making new observations while searching for an explanation of evolutionary change (i.e., the causal mechanism). This story might not fit the facts, however, since Darwin appears to have conceived his theory very soon in his life, perhaps before 1840. Apparently, Darwin aspired to publish the theory only when it appeared unquestionable but when he wrote down his ideas in detail exposing its critical assumptions and deducing several "expected observations" he noted numerous drawbacks in both. Fearful of the reactions of their colleagues, he delayed publishing the theory. Darwin did not postpone publication because he was looking for the explanation of evolutionary change between 1840 and 1858; he already had the explanation and remained obsessively testing it. The process through which evolutionary theory was conceived highlights the key role of creativity in the development of human knowledgeand, therefore, constitutes a valuable model to consider when teaching about "scientific discoveries". Fil:de Casenave, J.L. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina. JOUR info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00733407_v24_n2_p65_Marone
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic Charles darwin
Creativity
Data
Evolution
Hypothesis
Hypothetical-deductive method
Induction
Natural selection
Science teaching
Theory
Rhea
Rheiformes
spellingShingle Charles darwin
Creativity
Data
Evolution
Hypothesis
Hypothetical-deductive method
Induction
Natural selection
Science teaching
Theory
Rhea
Rheiformes
Marone, L.
de Casenave, J.L.
Rheas, mockingbirds, and the "creation" of evolution
topic_facet Charles darwin
Creativity
Data
Evolution
Hypothesis
Hypothetical-deductive method
Induction
Natural selection
Science teaching
Theory
Rhea
Rheiformes
description The ideas of evolutionary change and natural selection were two extraordinary contributions of 19th-century science to culture and society. Charles Darwin formalized the first idea from some outstanding antecedents and entirely invented the second one, although he delayed the publication of both. Some of Darwin's own comments gave rise to the impression that he deferred publication because he remained summarizing information and making new observations while searching for an explanation of evolutionary change (i.e., the causal mechanism). This story might not fit the facts, however, since Darwin appears to have conceived his theory very soon in his life, perhaps before 1840. Apparently, Darwin aspired to publish the theory only when it appeared unquestionable but when he wrote down his ideas in detail exposing its critical assumptions and deducing several "expected observations" he noted numerous drawbacks in both. Fearful of the reactions of their colleagues, he delayed publishing the theory. Darwin did not postpone publication because he was looking for the explanation of evolutionary change between 1840 and 1858; he already had the explanation and remained obsessively testing it. The process through which evolutionary theory was conceived highlights the key role of creativity in the development of human knowledgeand, therefore, constitutes a valuable model to consider when teaching about "scientific discoveries".
format JOUR
author Marone, L.
de Casenave, J.L.
author_facet Marone, L.
de Casenave, J.L.
author_sort Marone, L.
title Rheas, mockingbirds, and the "creation" of evolution
title_short Rheas, mockingbirds, and the "creation" of evolution
title_full Rheas, mockingbirds, and the "creation" of evolution
title_fullStr Rheas, mockingbirds, and the "creation" of evolution
title_full_unstemmed Rheas, mockingbirds, and the "creation" of evolution
title_sort rheas, mockingbirds, and the "creation" of evolution
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00733407_v24_n2_p65_Marone
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AT decasenavejl rheasmockingbirdsandthecreationofevolution
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