
Delving into the pages of this volume feels like joining Charles Darwin’s own study, where his correspondence and diary entries reveal the restless mind behind the theory of evolution. The letters capture his excitement, anxieties, and the flood of reactions that followed the first publication of On the Origin of Species, while his notes on natural history, hybrids, and the inheritance of traits expose the meticulous reasoning that underpinned his groundbreaking ideas.
An autobiographical chapter, edited by his son, adds a personal dimension, showing a scientist wrestling with health, family responsibilities, and the weight of public scrutiny. Listeners will hear the lively exchanges with fellow naturalists, the careful revisions for a second edition, and the early hints of how Darwin’s ideas would reshape biology—offering a vivid portrait of a thinker at the height of his intellectual vigor.
Language
en
Duration
~18 hours (1048K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2000-02-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1809–1882
Best known for developing the theory of evolution by natural selection, this English naturalist changed how people understand life on Earth. His voyage on HMS Beagle and years of careful observation led to some of the most influential scientific books ever written.
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