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Darwin, Worms, etc

4/29/2013

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Darwin, Worms, etc.


Who knows why our interest gets captured? I say that I have nothing  good to read and Laura Hair mentions David Quammen. Unable to find the exact  book she had read, I pick up his book on Darwin[1] and  that starts it off. Something shows up on public television, then there is  Darwin's book on worms, and a lecture series from Stanford available on YouTube.  And so on. So I am in a state of mind where everything seems to point to Charles Darwin.


There is so much that is interesting, and so easy to go all didactic on it, but I have to say a few things about this curious fascinating man. His theory on natural selection was revolutionary of course, but also of interest is just his wide and detailed attention to all sorts of things, his family life where his beloved wife had a
deep religious belief that he obviously did not share, his hypochondria along with bouts of real illness that was never fully identified and weirdly treated, the letters he wrote constantly, often asking politely for biological samples from travelers. He was on the Beagle in his twenties, but after that he didn't actually go into the field, and yet accumulated mountains of research that supported his theories. He lived with his large family at Down House in Kent. Support from his well-to-do father was the source of income, so when he was well he was free to explore his many interests.


I was able to get his study of  earthworms[2] and am finding it a wonderful read, especially because of a sense of his voice coming through. It's a slim, dog-eared little thing with a torn front cover, unearthed for me in the library stacks. In relentless detail he describes his experiments that lead to his conclusion that  worms have more intelligence than, say, ants, that their enormous appetites produce castings that till the earth over and over, that only sick worms wander about during daylight, and other intriguing tidbits. He is
sometimes quite funny, for example, he describes the different manner in which worms in a protected container in his lab cover their burrows, in contrast to those in their natural habitat. The ones that have it easier are "slovenly" in   making their burrow entrances. He cuts paper into  triangles to see how worms would pull variously shaped leaves inside to block their entrances, and concludes that they can figure out the shape and therefore which end should be pulled to block the hole most effectively, unlike ants that stupidly pull and pull across something that could simply be turned sideways and easily pulled in.

 Random info:
 The US is at the low end in a graph outlining global belief in evolution, right down at the bottom with Bulgaria and Turkey. 

Darwin solidified his rejection of religion upon the death of his  ten-year-old daughter Annie. 

He was a homebody, - played two games of backgammon with his wife every  day.


The publication of his On the Origin of the Species was hurried along by his publisher when it seemed that
a paper on evolution was coming out by Alfred Russel Wallace. After a flurry it was agreed that the first paper would be co-written since their theories had been arrived at independently. High drama in scientific circles. It didn't make much of a splash at first.

His last book was the one on worms and it was a best seller.





 
 
[1] (The
Reluctant Mr. Darwin: An Intimate Portrait of Charles Darwin and the Making of
His Theory of Evolution
(Great Discoveries); W. W. Norton, 2006. ISBN 978-0-393-32995-7)


 
[2] The formation of vegetable mould,
through the action of worms, with observations on their habits.


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