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         Darwin George:     more books (101)
  1. Life of Charles Darwin by G. T. (George Thomas) Bettany, 2010-04-16
  2. The Origin of Species (Barnes & Noble Classics Series) by Charles Darwin, 2003-12-15
  3. George Levine, Darwin Loves You.(Book review): An article from: Wordsworth Circle by Robert M. Ryan, 2008-09-22
  4. The Scientific Papers of Sir George Darwin: Supplementary Volume (Cambridge Library Collection - PhysicalSciences) (Volume 5) by George Howard Darwin, 2009-07-20
  5. The Scientific Papers of Sir George Darwin 5 Volume Paperback Set (Cambridge Library Collection - PhysicalSciences) by George Howard Darwin, 2009-09-24
  6. People From Lichfield: Samuel Johnson, Erasmus Darwin, George Farquhar, David Garrick, Joseph Addison, Elias Ashmole, Theophilus Levett
  7. Coleopterists; Charles Darwin, George Bornemissza, Horace Donisthorpe, Johann Friedrich Von Eschscholtz, Thomas Vernon Wollaston
  8. George Darwin
  9. English Geologists: William Smith, Charles Lapworth, Lucas Barrett, Charles Darwin, George Julius Poulett Scrope, William Buckland
  10. Europe For Dummies by Donald Olson, Liz Albertson, et all 2009-01-27
  11. Ellipsoidal harmonic analysis (Philosophical transactions / Royal Society of London. Series A) by George Howard Darwin, 1901
  12. Mental Evolution in Animals: With a Posthumous Essay On Instinct by Charles Darwin by Charles Darwin, George John Romanes, 2010-04-01
  13. Mental Evolution in Animals: With a Posthumous Essay On Instinct by Charles Darwin by Charles Darwin, George John Romanes, 2010-04-08
  14. Mental evolution in animals. With a posthumous essay on instinct by Charles Darwin by George John Romanes, Charles Darwin, 2010-08-29

41. Home
The pioneer of Aboriginal rock music, george Rrurrambu from North East Arnhem Land, darwin Symphony Orchestra s Moving Images, Gardens Amphitheatre
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WHATS ON NOW? Sharon, Keep Ya Hair On! Studio Theatre
6:30pm Tuesday 20th September 2005 Sharon, Keep Ya Hair On! is a joyful musical celebration of the power of positive thinking and creativity. This funky, funny, wild and wacky trilogy of stories (from the pen of Gillian Rubenstein) is about adapting to change. A mixture of a rock concert, story-telling and drama, Sharon, Keep Ya Hair On! features a mix of interactivity, music, song, live video projection, children’s art and structured play. The audience becomes involved in the performance as would a live studio television audience; they see the show and become part of it. Art of the Stone Country , Gallery
Great Guitars , Playhouse
8:00pm Wednesday 28th September 2005 This concert brings together Ralph Towner, Slava Grigoryan and Wolfgang Muthspiel, three acknowledged geniuses in the guitar world whose influences are as varied as the continents they hail from. Even with these diverse backgrounds both geographically and musically, there are however similarities….. They were all classically trained and are each, in a sense, expanding the classical repertoire, as their compositions and performances combine classical, jazz, fusion, world and folk music influences. Three master soloists performing together for one amazing concert.

42. Darkness At Mid-Day -- Darwin's Attitude Toward Religion: In Cornell University'
darwin, george H., Bores. The Century, vol. 56, issue 6 (Oct 1898). darwin, georgeHoward, Professor, Saturn s Rings. Harper s New Monthly Magazine, vol.
http://cdl.library.cornell.edu/moa/browse.author/d.14.html
A B C D ... Non-alphabetic
Darkness at Mid-Day Darwin's Attitude Toward Religion:
Previous Next Darkness at Mid-Day The Living Age , vol. 55, issue 697 (October 3, 1857). Darley's Illustrations of Margaret Putnam's Monthly , vol. 9, issue 49 (January 1857). Darley's Judd's Margaret Putnam's Monthly , vol. 8, issue 46 (October 1856). Darley's Sketches Abroad with Pen and Pencil The Atlantic Monthly , vol. 23, issue 135 (January 1869). Manufacturer and Builder , vol. 21, issue 9 (September 1889). The Darling Domestic Filter Manufacturer and Builder , vol. 26, issue 3 (March 1894). Darling Dorel Harper's New Monthly Magazine , vol. 2, issue 12 (May 1851). The Darling Filters Manufacturer and Builder , vol. 26, issue 9 (September 1894). Darlington's Memorials of Bartram The North American Review , vol. 70, issue 146 (January 1850). Darstellungen aus der Sittengeschichte Roms. Ludwig Friedlander The Atlantic Monthly , vol. 29, issue 174 (April 1872). Dartmoor, Colin The Drover's Carpet-Bag The American Whig Review , vol. 10, issue 20 (Aug 1849). Dartmouth College The New-England Magazine , vol. 1, issue 4 (October 1831).

43. Darwin, Sir George --  Encyclopædia Britannica
darwin, Sir george English astronomer who championed the theory that the Moonwas once part of the Earth, until it was pulled free to form a satellite.
http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9029407
Home Browse Newsletters Store ... Subscribe Already a member? Log in Content Related to this Topic This Article's Table of Contents Sir George Darwin Print this Table of Contents Shopping Price: USD $1495 Revised, updated, and still unrivaled. The Official Scrabble Players Dictionary (Hardcover) Price: USD $15.95 The Scrabble player's bible on sale! Save 30%. Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary Price: USD $19.95 Save big on America's best-selling dictionary. Discounted 38%! More Britannica products Darwin, Sir George (Howard)
 Encyclopædia Britannica Article Page 1 of 1
Sir George Darwin
born July 9, 1845, Downe, Kent, England
died December 7, 1912, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire
Sir George Darwin, portrait by M. Gertler, 1912; in the National Portrait Gallery, London
By courtesy of the National Portrait Gallery, London English astronomer who championed the theory that the Moon was once part of the Earth, until it was pulled free to form a satellite.

44. BBC - History - Erasmus Darwin (1731 - 1802)
Erasmus darwin was a famous doctor, scientist, inventor and poet a man who wasthinking about Charles darwin george III James Watt. Timelines
http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/historic_figures/darwin_erasmus.shtml
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Erasmus Darwin (1731 - 1802)
After studying at Cambridge and Edinburgh, Darwin established his medical practice in Lichfield. It was an immediate success, with patients travelling considerable distances for his consultations. At one stage he was offered - and refused - the post of royal physician to George III. Medicine notwithstanding, he had an extremely broad range of scientific interests. He was a founder member of the Lunar Society, whose members included some of the greatest innovators of the age: Josiah Wedgwood, Matthew Boulton and James Watt, and Joseph Priestley, who discovered oxygen. His own inventions and ideas varied enormously. A horizontal windmill invented in 1765 was made and used by Josiah Wedgwood. A carriage that would not tip over was designed in 1766. In 1771 he invented a speaking machine, a canal lift for barges and a minute artificial bird. In 1778 he came up with a copying machine and a variety of weather monitoring machines that included a north-south airflow machine and a weather vane with the pointer in his study. During the following decade his work continued. In 1783 he invented an artesian well and conducted research into the formation of clouds, the latter of which he published in 1788. Despite his many innovations, however, he retained no patents. He felt they would have harmed his reputation as a doctor and instead encouraged his friends to pursue his ideas; they then patented their own, modified, versions.

45. The KLI Theory Lab - Review Of Beer, G. 2000. Darwin's Plots. By Johann W.N. Tem
darwin s Plots Evolutionary Narrative in darwin, george Eliot and NineteenthCenturyFiction. Second edition. Cambridge Cambridge University Press.
http://www.kli.ac.at/theorylab/Reviews/BeerG2000.htm
Review of: Beer, G. Darwin's Plots: Evolutionary Narrative in Darwin, George Eliot and Nineteenth-Century Fiction. Second edition. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Published by H-Ideas (October, 2001) Darwin and Eliot in the plots of nineteenth-century science and fiction In this well-written and thoroughly contemplated intellectual history of nineteenth century literature, which has been published for a second time since 1983, the accent is on Charles Darwin (1809-1882) and the effect his scientific observations had on writers of fiction. Darwin had set himself the task of understanding the roots of a past in which humankind hardly featured. Many scientific thinkers of his time felt as he did about the matter. He was however the onein concert with the perceptions of many of his contemporariesto outline one of the major theories of modern science. The fact that it had been absorbed into literary thinking is an interesting barometer for determining precisely how and when his theories started finding their home in popular and intellectual thinking. Beer's work is an intellectual history of the cultural environment in which Darwin found himself in the 1860's and the 1870's. Her knowledge of the literature of the period enables the reader to come to a better understanding of how the craft of writing was progressing under conditions of creative construction. Apart from the language (written and spoken) there are numerous discussions of devices used by authors in their work. They were writing at a time when ideas were being shaped by thoughts about observations on things beyond the shores of the British Isles. It was an environment conducive to addressing universal tendencies.

46. The KLI Theory Lab - Keywords - Darwin
Beer, G. 2000. darwin s Plots Evolutionary Narrative in darwin, george Eliotand NineteenthCentury Fiction. 2nd ed. Cambridge Cambridge University Press.
http://www.kli.ac.at/theorylab/Keyword/D/Darwin.html
Darwin This keyword was found on the following pages:
Alland, A.
Human Nature, Darwin's View. New York: Columbia University Press. Keywords: Darwin human nature
Aranda-Anzaldo, A.
1998. On natural selection and Hume's second problem. Evolution and Cognition Keywords: biogenesis Darwin evolution Hume ...
Beer, G.
Darwin's Plots: Evolutionary Narrative in Darwin, George Eliot and Nineteenth-Century Fiction. 2nd ed. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Review by Johann W.N. Tempelhoff. Keywords: Darwin Eliot, George evolutionary narrative fiction literature ...
Bowler, P.J.
Charles Darwin: The Man and His Influence. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Reissued Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996. Keywords: biography Darwin
Burkhardt, R.W., Jr.
1985. Darwin on animal behavior and evolution. In Kohn, The Darwinian Heritage Keywords: animal behavior Darwin history of evolutionary biology
Carroll, J.
Evolution and Literary Theory. #: University of Missouri Press. Keywords: Darwin Derrida Foucault human culture ...

Carroll, J.
1998. Literary study and evolutionary theory. A review essay. Human Nature Keywords: Darwin human culture indeterminacy literary theory ...
Continenza, B.

47. Darwin, Sir George Howard. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-05
darwin, Sir george Howard. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 200105.
http://www.bartleby.com/65/da/DarwinG.html
Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia Cultural Literacy World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations Respectfully Quoted English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference Columbia Encyclopedia PREVIOUS NEXT ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Darwin, Sir George Howard

48. §11. Sir George Darwin. VIII. The Literature Of Science. Vol. 14. The Victorian
Vol. 14. The Victorian Age, Part Two. The Cambridge History of English and AmericanLiterature An Encyclopedia in Eighteen Volumes. 1907–21.
http://www.bartleby.com/224/0811.html
Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia Cultural Literacy World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations Respectfully Quoted English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference Cambridge History The Victorian Age, Part Two The Literature of Science ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
Volume XIV. The Victorian Age, Part Two.

49. Hentzi: Darwin & Darwinism In Victorian Literature
My own discussion of darwin and george Eliot draws heavily on the works of thesetwo writers, above all Beer s chapter on Middlemarch (14980).
http://darwin.baruch.cuny.edu/faculty/hentziA.html
Darwin and Darwinism in Victorian Literature
27 September 1998 Interest in theories of evolution is such a regular feature of English intellectual life in the mid to late nineteenth century that there is hardly a major writer of the period whose work is not in some way touched by the issue. Darwin himself is everywhere in Victorian literature, including a fictionalized portrait in Elizabeth Gaskell's Wives and Daughters (1866), and he was by no means an isolated figure. On the contrary, the scientific debate in which he intervened so decisively dates back at least as far as the three volumes of Charles Lyell's Principles of Geology (1830-33) and includes such other important (albeit less authoritative) influences as Robert Chambers' enormously popular Vestiges of Creation (1844). In nineteenth-century England, the writings of natural scientists as well as popular presentations of their ideas found a substantial readership outside of the scientific community itself, as poets and novelists-along with a notable slice of the thinking public-eagerly ordered the latest scientific works the moment they were announced by the publisher. To appreciate the motives for this interest, one must look to the social history of the period, which is essential to a full understanding of the relationship between literary and scientific developments. England's progression from a largely agricultural society to a heavily industrialized one over the half century preceding the publication of On the Origin of Species

50. Berggren: Darwin As Synecdoche: The Literature Classroom
during the darwin faculty seminars that george Eliot had read darwin carefully . Milton, the last great writer of the Renaissance, and george Eliot,
http://darwin.baruch.cuny.edu/faculty/berggren.html
Implementation in the literature classroom:
Darwin as Synecdoche
1 August 1998
Studying literature allows us to see how Darwin changed the cultural landscape. References to Darwin and to a series of scientific ideas associated with his name proliferate throughout the literature of the 19th century and persist still. One might say they function as the figure of speech called synecdoche, in which the part stands for the whole. In our course in Great Works of Literature II, I have long used an excerpt from the opening chapter of Theodore Dreiser's novel The Financier , the first book of a trilogy based on the career of Charles T. Yerkes, who made a fortune building the street-railways of Chicago and London. Yerkes' business practices, however, could not stand up to careful scrutiny; unlike many of the great robber barons, he actually served time in prison. How, Dreiser asks, did this human type evolve? The Financier opens with the young Frank Cowperwood trying to figure out how life was organized. How did all these people get in to the world? What were they doing here? What started things, anyhow? His mother told him the story of Adam and Eve, but he didn't believe it. He answers his question by watching a lobster devour a squid in a tank displayed in the window of the local fish market. This exercise in the survival of the fittest shapes his entire life. Concluding that the squid "didn't have a chance," he has a flash of insight: "Things lived on each otherthat was it." The chapter ends with an apparent non-sequitur:

51. George Darwin -- Facts, Info, And Encyclopedia Article
Sir george Howard darwin, (Click link for more info and facts about FRS) FRS (July9 1845 – December 7 1912) was a British (A physicist who studies
http://www.absoluteastronomy.com/encyclopedia/g/ge/george_darwin.htm
George Darwin
[Categories: Darwin Wedgwood family, British mathematicians, Fellows of the Royal Society, British astronomers, 1912 deaths, 1845 births]
Sir George Howard Darwin (Click link for more info and facts about F.R.S.) F.R.S. (A physicist who studies astronomy) astronomer and (A person skilled in mathematics) mathematician , the second son and fifth child of (A river in eastern Massachusetts that empties into Boston Harbor and that separates Cambridge from Boston) Charles and (Click link for more info and facts about Emma Darwin) Emma Darwin
He studied under (Click link for more info and facts about Charles Pritchard) Charles Pritchard , went on to study at (A university in England) Cambridge University , was admitted to the Bar, but returned to science. In 1883 he became Plumian Professor of (The branch of physics that studies celestial bodies and the universe as a whole) Astronomy and (Click link for more info and facts about Experimental Philosophy) Experimental Philosophy at (A university in England) Cambridge University
He studied (Click link for more info and facts about tidal forces) tidal forces involving the (A typical star that is the source of light and heat for the planets in the solar system) Sun (Any natural satellite of a planet) Moon , and (The 3rd planet from the sun; the planet on which we live)

52. Archives Hub: George Howard Darwin: Correspondence And Papers On The Tides
fonds Sir georgeHoward darwin (18451912), mathematician and astronomer, was the son of......Name of Creator george Howard darwin Level of
http://www.archiveshub.ac.uk/news/0504darwin.html
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George Howard Darwin: Correspondence and Papers on the Tides
Reference and contact details: GB 0012 MSS.Add.5749-5750
Title : George Howard Darwin: Correspondence and Papers on the Tides
Dates of creation
Held at : Cambridge University Library, Department of Manuscripts and University Archives
Extent : 1 bundle and 1 box-file
Name of Creator : George Howard Darwin
Level of Description : fonds
Language of Material : eng
Administrative/Biographical History
Sir George Howard Darwin (1845-1912), mathematician and astronomer, was the son of Charles Darwin. He was educated at Clapham Grammar School and Trinity College Cambridge (B.A., 1868). He was a fellow of Trinity, 1868-1878, and Plumian professor of astronomy and experimental philosophy at Cambridge, 1883-1912. Darwin concentrated on the study of the earth in his early work, before examining the earth-moon system and the influence of the tides. He became a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1879. His collected works were published in 1907-1911.
Scope and Content
MS.Add.5749: G.H. Darwin, papers on the tides, in various hands, 1882-1895, 61 folios.

53. Restoring The Tortoise Dynasty
Before Lonesome george was found, the last reported sighting of tortoises onPinta was in 1906, The Charles darwin Foundation for the Galapagos Islands.
http://www.darwinfoundation.org/Restoring/george.html
The Story of
Lonesome George
The small island of Pinta is located in the North of the Galapagos archipelago. One of the 11 remaining races of the Galapagos Giant Tortoise ( Geochelone elephantopus abingdoni ) comes from Pinta, but their history is a tragic one. Whalers and sealers heavily depleted their numbers in the 19th century, some ships taking many tortoises at a time. The tortoises were a good food source as they could live up to a year in the holds of the ships without food and water. Females were generally taken first as they are much smaller than the males and could be found in the more accessible lowland areas during the egg laying season. Before Lonesome George was found, the last reported sighting of tortoises on Pinta was in 1906, when the island was visited by the Californian Academy of Sciences. They collected three males, which were the last tortoises seen on Pinta for the next 60 years. Another issue for the Giant Tortoises of Pinta Island was the presence of goats, which were released by fishermen in the 1950's as an alternative food source. These introduced mammals destroyed much of the vegetation and directly competed with any remaining tortoises for food.

54. Darwin Events, Festivals, Things To Do: Events In Darwin Area, NT, Australia AU
darwin Events, Festivals and Things to Do (darwin, Northern Territory, evening Christmas carols at the Amphitheatre in darwin s george Brown Botanical
http://www.darwin.world-guides.com/darwin_events.html
Darwin Events, Festivals and Things to Do - World Guide to Darwin Darwin, Australia world-guides.com - Darwin city guide featuring Darwin, Northern Territory (NT) events, exhibitions, Darwin festivals, things to do, concerts, carnivals, public holidays and general Darwin, Northern Territory (NT), Australia event and festival information. Darwin Events, Festivals and Things to Do - Last updated 31/8/2005.
Darwin Car Rental
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Darwin Events and Darwin Festivals
(Darwin, Northern Territory - NT, Australia AU)
Darwin has numerous exciting festivals and events, in Darwin, on the outskirts of Darwin and in nearby areas of Australia's Northern Territory (NT). Festivals, events and lively things to see and do in Darwin include Darwin carnivals and parades, Darwin sports and horse racing events, and Darwin music and arts festivals. One of the most popular events in Darwin is the Beer Can Regatta in June, a truly unique festival featuring races for boats made completely out of beer cans.
The helpful Darwin Regional Tourism Association Information Centre offers useful information about the latest events and festivals in and around Darwin, many of which attract large crowds of spectators and participants.

55. David's Quote Database - Reality, Reason, Rights, And A Bit Of Humor
Charles darwin 4 quotes Chinese proverb - 1 quotes Christopher Morley -1 quotes General Sherman - 1 quotes george Bernard Shaw - 2 quotes
http://quotes.rationalmind.net/
David's Quote Database
Currently in the database: 609 quotes by 168 authors.
Top authors: Ayn Rand Robert A. Heinlein Thomas Jefferson Ludwig Von Mises ... Frederic Bastiat Quotes by Author Quotes By Topic Quotes by Source
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56. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition: Darwin, Sir George Howard@ HighBeam Re
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition darwin, Sir george Howard@ HighBeam Research.
http://www.highbeam.com/ref/doc0.asp?docid=1E1:DarwinG

57. Darwin And Literature: A Bibliography
Levine, george (1988), darwin and the Novelists Patterns of Science in Grinnell, george James (1969), The darwin Case a computer analysis of
http://ehlt.flinders.edu.au/english/Victorians/DarwinLitBiblio.htm
Darwinism and the Victorian Literary Imagination: A Bibliography The literature of Darwinism, especially the technical literature, is enormous. This bibliography is pretty much restricted to secondary sources which in some way deal explicitly with, or represent, or throw light on, the relations between Darwinism (or, more generally, evolutionary biology) and imaginative literature in the late nineteenth century. Some more obscure primary texts from the period are included. Readers are advised that I'm making this bibliography available on an 'as is' basis. There are many typographical errors caused by the scanning process. While it is fairly comprehensive within its limits, it is not up to date. I hope to add to it periodically. Details of other items for inclusion are very welcome; my contact details are here Do investigate David Clifford's site on neo-Lamarckism and nineteenth century writers . An extensive and up-to-date bibliography forms part of this on-going research project. Back to Peter Morton's homepage The Vital Science: Biology and the Literary Imagination (full text) Major Sources Appleman, Philip Dean (1955), 'Darwin and the literary critics', unpublished PhD thesis, Northwestern University. Deals with the biological data available to, and used by, Pater, Stephen, J.A. Symonds and others.

58. AllRefer.com - Sir George Howard Darwin (Astronomy, Biography) - Encyclopedia
AllRefer.com reference and encyclopedia resource provides complete informationon Sir george Howard darwin, Astronomy, Biographies.
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Related Category: Astronomy, Biographies Sir George Howard Darwin Darwin . He was Plumian professor (from 1883) of astronomy and experimental philosophy at Cambridge, and a recognized authority on cosmogony. He wrote Scientific Papers
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59. English 233 (Abbott) Studies In Nineteenth Century Literature
Studies in Nineteenth Century Literature darwin and the Victorian Novel Winter 2002 darwin s Plots Evolutionary Narrative in darwin, george Eliot,
http://www.english.ucsb.edu/faculty/pabbott/courses/english233/
English 233 (Abbott)
Studies in Nineteenth Century Literature: Darwin and the Victorian Novel
Winter 2002
Wednesday, 5:30-8 in South Hall 2617 Course description: This is a course on the impact of Darwin's version of evolutionary theory on the fiction of the later nineteenth century. The impact was as rich and various as it was profound, raising fundamental questions about who we are as a species, how special we are, why we "do good," why we fall in love, what freedom we have, what cosmological narrative (if any) we inhabit, and what control we have over our lives and the course of history. We start with selections from Darwin's Origin of Species (1859) and The Descent of Man (1871) taken from the Norton Critical Edition of Darwin 3rd edition , edited by Philip Appleman. We then move straight to one of the earlier novels to be directly influenced by Darwin (and also one of the early works of science fiction), Bulwer-Lytton's The Coming Race (1871). The course ends with science fiction, too: H. G. Wells's

60. The Writings Of Charles Darwin
darwin, Charles, A posthumous essay on instinct in george John Romanes, Beer, Gillian, darwin s Plots Evolutionary Narrative in darwin, george Eliot
http://pages.britishlibrary.net/charles.darwin3/darwin_biblio.htm
The writings of Charles Darwin on the web
by John van Wyhe
Darwin Bibliography
Bibliography of Darwin's writings
Secondary Bibliography
Books by Darwin
-Darwin's contributions to: books periodicals
Bo oks Darwin, Charles, Journal o f researches into the natural history and geology of the countries visited during the voyage round the world of H.M.S. Beagle , 11th edn London, John Murray, 1913. [first published London, Henry Colburn, 1839]. -Narrative of the Surveying Voyages of Her Majesty's Ships 'Adventure' and 'Beagle' between the years 1826 and 1836, describing their examination of the Southern shores of South America, and the 'Beagle's' circumnavigation of the globe
-Volume iii. Journal and Remarks , 1832-1836. By Charles Darwin. London, 1839. [ Digitization forthcoming -Zoology of the Voyage of H.M.S. 'Beagle.' Edited and superintended by Charles Darwin
-Part I. Fossil Mammalia , by Richard Owen. With a Geological Introduction, by Charles Darwin . London, 1840.
-Part II.

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