You are not signed in. Sign in.

List Books: Buy books on ListBooks.org

Correspondence of Charles Darwin: 1856-1857, Vol. 6 »

Book cover image of Correspondence of Charles Darwin: 1856-1857, Vol. 6 by Charles Darwin

Authors: Charles Darwin, Sydney Smith (Editor), Frederick Burkhardt (Editor), Frederick H. Burkhardt
ISBN-13: 9780521255868, ISBN-10: 0521255864
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Date Published: November 1990
Edition: (Non-applicable)

Find Best Prices for This Book »

Author Biography: Charles Darwin

Scientist Charles Darwin once asserted that "a scientific man ought to have no wishes, no affections -- a mere heart of stone." Indeed, his objective take on evolution asserted in The Origin of Species shook the foundations of traditional religion to its core.

Book Synopsis

This volume covers the culmination of Darwin's work on species. From early in 1856, when he was persuaded that the time had come to publish an account of his heterodox theories through 1857, Darwin's letters document the labor involved in composing his "big species book," his zest for research, and his unflagging determination to succeed. As always, old friends and more recent acquaintances are drawn into the project. Darwin writes for the first time to Alfred Russel Wallace seeking specimens of Malayan fowls. Joseph Dalton Hooker is his sounding board for botanical speculations and Thomas Henry Huxley soon takes up a similar role in matters of comparative anatomy and embryology. William Bernhard Tegetmeier is the provider of pigeons and poultry and Asa Gray dispatches from Massachusetts invaluable botanical data. Darwin fully exploits his gift for drawing the best from his correspondents and, collectively, their letters provide a remarkable survey of what was--and was not--believed about the nature and origin of species in the middle years of the century.

Table of Contents

List of illustrations; List of letters; Introduction; Acknowledgments; List of provenances; Note on editorial policy Darwin/Wedgwood genealogy; Abbreviations and symbols; The Correspondence, 1856-7; Appendixes; Manuscript alterations and comments; Bibliography; Biographical register and index to correspondents; Index.

Subjects