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In Evolutionism
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- Complete citations to "Early ... and complete References
- Matthew Hale sentence. Reshape according to the following
- According to Hale, the mechanism of the "Primordial Seeds" that connects "Men, Animals, Birds and Fishes" is an "absurdity" because "it . . . "
- Insert summary sentence at beginning such that. Between 1869 and 1873, the scientific community's use of the words "evolution" and "evolutionist" changed from a general meaning of form following from the internal processes of form which applied to geology, abiogenesis, and biological evolution to just biological evolution. Witness the following.
- Herbert Spencer the son
- Note by number the Peloza court quoting Webster's. Validated that popularly e = e.
- Include Processualism; "culture takes the place of biological adaptation as a means of increasing fitness relative to the environment" (quote from the Wikipedia page)
- the direct opposite of the popular notions of "evolution" at the time which asserted that the parent [passed selections from] the "germs" given by the
- Robert Carneiro
- Temple of Nature
- For the last 100,000 years, Human adaptation has been cultural, not biological. Hence, the evolutionary function and mechanisms of natural selection for humans has migrated to cultural evolution. Accordingly, cultural anthropologists see the evolutionism in cultural anthropology being a direct descendent of natural selection for the case of humans in the last 100,000 years. Boyd and Richerson
- Harvard's evolutionary biologist Stephen Jay Gould calls himself an evolutionist. For example, "First, they [the creationists] play upon a vernacular misunderstanding of the word "theory" to convey the false impression that we evolutionists are covering up the rotten core of our edifice (Gould 1994)."
- Stephen Jay Gould, "Evolution as Fact and Theory," May 1981; from Hen's Teeth and Horse's Toes." New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 1994, pp. 253-262.
- Link to anthropology dictionary
- Literary 1841 reference to ... Edgar Allan Poe's "Murders in the Rue Morgue."
- Basic scholarly quotations: Frank, L. 1995. "The Murders in the Rue Morgue": Edgar Allan Poe's Evolutionary Reverie. Nineteenth-Century Literature" 50 (2), pp. 168-188.
- Poe's 1848 publication of "Eureka," a version of a lecture that Poe gave on the Universe--based on lectures by Nichols, and on Nichols's Arthictecture of the Heavens." [1]
- Quote from Poe's "Murders in the Rue Morgue": "I will explain," he said, "and that you may comprehend all clearly, we will first retrace the course of your meditations, from the moment in which I spoke to you until that of the _rencontre_ with the fruiterer in question. The larger links of the chain run thus - Chantilly, Orion, Dr. Nichols, Epicurus, Stereotomy, the street stones, the fruiterer." [2]
- In the book Evolutionism in Cultural Anthropology, Robert Carneiro, a curator at the American Museum of Natural History, reviews the historical origins of evolutionism--the general idea that the forms of today are restructurings and redevelopments of the forms of the past--generally and reviews the uses of the concepts of evolutionism as applied specifically to the branches of anthropology that study the processes that force human culture to change. Carneiro describes the progression of evolutionism theories at two levels. First, ...
- Kant and Laplace. Theories of evolution of suns and planets. [3]
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