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RE: Do You Know His Name? Darwin Co-Author, and Discoverer of the Largest Bee in the World

in StemSocial2 years ago

These days everyone mentions Wallace alongside Darwin as if the two discovered the theory together. This annoys me! Darwin had discovered the theory long before, and only postponed publishing it for fear of how it would affect people around him, and also probably because he lost himself in the routine of verifying it and perfecting it, itself an excuse for postponing publication. And then suddenly the Wallace letter arrives and Darwin knows he either outs with it or he gets scooped and decades of work go to waste.

Everyone knows Darwin came first, but the rules of today say that if you don't publish, it's your own fault, so strictly-speaking - again by today's rules of bending-over-backwards fairmindedness - the two independently discovered the theory.

But Darwin didn't just discover his theory. The package matters, too. I could give you the gist of Hamlet in this here comment, but Shakespeare I am not. Darwin wasn't just a scientist, he was an artist in how he expounded his theory and was far ahead of his time in many ways, including that he avoided grave mistakes that biologists still make to this day in interpreting his theory. There's still things to be discovered by reading his work.

Wallace, on the other hand, as you say . . . man is an exception . . . spiritualism . . . it's almost like he hit on natural selection by accident. By not applying it to people, he reveals that he didn't really understand the theory. And it's not just him: Michael Shermer has a thing he calls "cognitive creationism, that we accept evolution fully from the neck down, but from the neck up it's all culture." Apparently it's still difficult for people to fully grasp Darwin, and Darwin himself is one of the few people who ever really got it.

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Hello @alexanderalexis,

I love it when you get into a subject 😇 This one grabbed you. My impression, from my reading (remember, Wallace is new to me) is that Wallace had been working on this theory for many years. He had traveled extensively in South American and had collected a trove of specimens. These were all lost in a shipwreck. Undeterred, he went to Southeast Asia and continued to collect. Not only that, his observations about unique species in land separated by a small body of water led to something called the Wallace Line. This line actually predated discovery of plate tectonics, and actually traced the line where two continents had separated millions of years before.

Again, Wallace is new to me. I am introducing him to others as I am introduced to him myself. There is also this from the Natural History Museum in the UK

Wallace began his travels through the Malay Archipelago (now Malaysia and Indonesia) in 1854. Over a period of eight years, he accumulated an astonishing 125,660 specimens, including more than 5,000 species new to western science

He sounds like more than an accidental, incidental figure.

But then, it's all new to me😃.

Thanks for stopping by @alexanderalexis. Always a pleasure.

😒

The kind of comment you read and become sooo disappointed to find the author doesn't post much... Loved this value addition to Ag's post.