“Man is descended from a hairy, tailed quadruped, probably arboreal in its habits” – Charles Darwin.
Charles Darwin is quite possibly the most
famous scientist of the 19th century. His observations and theories would breed
extreme resistance and would leave behind a mixed legacy, but one that included
unquestionable change in the way that most of Western science views the natural
world.
Charles Darwin was born on 12 February 1809 in
Shrewsbury, England to Robert Darwin and Susannah, whose father was Josiah
Wedgwood, and was the second youngest of six children born to the couple. Although
a fairly average student in most regards, Darwin grew up with an appreciation of
the natural world from a young age. However,
his father had a different sort of study in mind and while in the summer of
1825 his dad had him work as an apprentice doctor and compelled him to go to
the University of Edinburgh Medical School, Darwin himself was far more
interested in natural history and by 1827 even presented a discovery concerning
black spores that were often found in oyster shells and his proof that they
were, in fact, the eggs of another animal called a Skate Leech.
This and other courses of study including
natural history, geology, and the classification of plants and animals helped
Charles Darwin find his true passion in life, which was in natural history and
the natural world. His poor grades deeply annoyed his father who instead
thought that this obsession with naturalism was merely a phase and he should
get onto something practical in life like becoming a member of the clergy. To
this end, his dad sent him to Christ College in Cambridge and Charles Darwin
began studying to become a country preacher.
Darwin’s naturalistic tendencies though did
not die while studying to be a man of the cloth; instead, he became friends
with another clergy member who himself was a shrewd naturalist and Darwin
during his famous voyage would even send samples and reports to him for
safekeeping.
Charles Darwin continued to collect and
observe specimens of the natural world, but as his final exams came around in
1831, Darwin knuckled down to the proper business of academics and did
exceptionally well, coming in at number 10 out of over a hundred and seventy
candidates. Throughout the early summer of 1831, he continued to study natural
history ravenously and read Paisley’s “Natural Theology of Evidences of the
Existence of Attributes of the Deity” which had been published almost 30 years
previously. In essence, it was a paper on intelligent design or how God used
the laws of nature to help bring about His own personal designs.
Having finished his course of study, a friend
and mentor suggested to Charles Darwin that he should see a little bit of the
world before he settled down to the life of a clergyman. Charles managed to join
a trip as a gentleman scholar on the HMS Beagle, and despite his father’s
misgivings and feeling that this was a waste of time, Charles himself was
excited for the opportunity that the Beagle would offer. The mission of the HMS
Beagle was to chart the coast of South America, a voyage that was to last for 5
years, although, unfortunately for poor Charles, he was seasick for almost the
entirety of the trip.
Even so, Charles Darwin’s passion as a
naturalist endured and he collected a huge array of specimens from the Canary
Islands, South Africa, the West and East coasts of South America, Australia and