Darwin Deleted: Imagining a World Without Darwin

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Product Details
Price
$38.40
Publisher
University of Chicago Press
Publish Date
Pages
328
Dimensions
6.3 X 9.1 X 1.1 inches | 1.35 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9780226068671

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About the Author
Peter J. Bowler is professor emeritus of the history of science at Queen's University, Belfast. He has written several books on the development and impact of evolutionism and on science and religion, including Evolution: The History of an Idea, The Eclipse of Darwinism, The Non-Darwinian Revolution, Charles Darwin: The Man and His Influence, Monkey Trials and Gorilla Sermons, Life's Splendid Drama, and Reconciling Science and Religion, the latter two also published by the University of Chicago Press.
Reviews
"A coup in counterfactual history. Only Peter J. Bowler, with his unique command of intellectual history, would dare to propose this book's radical heresy. Darwinian atheists will excommunicate him; 'God delusionists' will slate him for deposing their tribal deity. But it is only by denying Darwin's historical necessity that the freedom to augur a world of post-Darwinian alternatives becomes possible."--James Moore, coauthor of Darwin's Sacred Cause
"What would science, and the world, have been like if Charles Darwin had never published On the Origin of Species? This exhilarating book is Peter Bowler's answer. He draws on unrivalled knowledge of evolutionary theorizing and its social lives to build up a compelling case for what might have been. Along the way, he shows by example how to pursue 'counterfactual' inquiry into the scientific past and why, if we seek genuine understanding of that past, we need to do so."
--Gregory Radick, author of The Simian Tongue
"Using his unrivaled knowledge of Charles Darwin and the revolution associated with his name, Peter J. Bowler digs deeply and profoundly into the ideas and events that Darwin's On the Origin of Species started by asking what would have happened had Darwin died young and the Origin never been written. Would science have gone on much the same; would social ideas associated with Darwin make no appearance? Bowler raises and discusses these and related questions in a work that is fun and informative. Whether or not he is right or wrong in his judgments, he makes you rethink yours. Buy the book and challenge Bowler's counterfactual history."--Michael Ruse, author of Darwinism and Its Discontents
"Darwin Deleted offers a journey into the history of evolutionism well worth taking. Through his scenario in which the Origin never appeared, Bowler improves our ability to think about the assumptions underlying contemporary debates."--Science
"Without Darwin, Peter Bowler concludes, we would probably have ended up in much the same place we are today, with an evolutionary theory based largely on natural selection, and with most of the big historical events of the past century unfolding as they did. Where Darwin really mattered was in timing. Here, ironically, the shock of his book, and the polarisation it caused, may have delayed the acceptance of evolution. The great man was ahead of his time, and science may have paid a price for that."
--New Scientist
"In this extremely entertaining and meticulously detailed book, Peter J. Bowler explores the development of evolutionary biology sans the grand old bearded one. . . . Removing Darwin from the picture altogether might be seen as rather drastic and many will raise an eyebrow at the approach Bowler adopts, yet it is a powerful and stimulating idea."
--Times Higher Education
"Darwin Deleted does the scientific community a great service by reminding it of ideas that are often mentioned only in passing, if at all, in basic biology classes, or even those that teach evolutionary theory. The mainstream history of science so dominants the story that failed contingencies of history have little bearing once a scientific theory becomes fact. Unless one is a science historian, learners should be engaged in studying and applying the best ideas, rather than retracing dead ends. But the dead ends can present their own fascination. Ideas like inheritance without genetics, the rigid view that once a species emerged it remained unchanged, or spontaneous generation from primitive forms, created ideas against which evidence could be applied."
--PopMatters
"Darwin Deleted is an important contribution to the history of science and is essential reading for students and scholars interested in the biological sciences and evolutionary thought. More importantly, however, it is an accessible book that will engage general readers and should be read by anyone who wants an informed view on the relationship between evolution and religion."--Quarterly Review of Biology