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Charles Darwin

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Charles Darwin (1809–1882) was the English naturalist whose theory of natural selection provided the first coherent mechanism for evolutionary change, overturning the then-dominant belief in fixed species created by design. His On the Origin of Species (1859) is not merely a work of biology but a work of systems thinking: it showed how ordered complexity could arise from the accumulation of small, undirected changes filtered by environmental consequences, without any need for a central planner. Darwin's method — drawing on biogeographical patterns, fossil sequences, artificial selection, and comparative anatomy — established a template for how complex historical processes can be reconstructed from distributed evidence.\n\nThe theory's reception was as much a social process as a scientific one. It destabilized not only biology but theology, epistemology, and the human self-image. The concept of universal Darwinism — the extension of Darwinian logic to culture, cognition, and technology — traces its legitimacy directly to the substrate-neutrality of Darwin's original argument.\n\n\n\n