
In this measured essay a nineteenth‑century clergyman takes the listener into the heart of the evolution debate, drawing a clear line between the hard facts gathered by naturalists and the theories those facts inspire. He argues that while the details of scientific investigation belong to specialists, the reasoning built on those details is open to anyone equipped with ordinary logic. By quoting contemporary voices and emphasizing the shared responsibility of public discourse, he invites readers to weigh the evidence without feeling compelled to master the technical minutiae of biology.
The discussion moves from the undeniable reality of growth—eggs becoming chickens, caterpillars into butterflies—to the subtle variations that plants and animals exhibit across climates and locales. From there, he outlines the spectrum of scientific opinion, showing how even leading figures disagree on how best to explain these observations. Listeners are offered a balanced, thought‑provoking portrait of a theory still in formation, encouraging them to form their own judgments about one of the era’s most contested ideas.
Language
en
Duration
~43 minutes (41K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2016-06-08
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1812–1894
An evangelical Church of England clergyman and religious writer, he spent much of his ministry in Tunbridge Wells and published books and sermons aimed at ordinary readers. His life later appeared in a memoir built around his own autobiographical notes.
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