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Countering revisionism—part 1: Ernst Haeckel, fraud is proven
Attempts have been made recently to rehabilitate Haeckel’s embryos. Such attempts fail miserably.
by E van Niekerk
Darwin, slavery, and abolition
Did Darwin’s abhorrence of slavery have anything to do with his theory of evolution?
by Russell Grigg
Darwin’s ‘savages’
Darwin supported a missionary society for years—but why?
by Russell Grigg
Darwinism and World War One
While the Second World War is more obviously connected to Darwinism, it also played an important role in the first.
by Lita Sanders
Darwin’s mentors
Two prominent clergymen unwittingly gave Darwin the long-age time frame he needed to make evolution ‘work’.
by Russell Grigg
Darwin’s Lamarckism vindicated?
Darwin later rejected pure ‘Darwinism’ for Larmarckism and now discoveries in epigenetics suggest that inheritance of acquired characteristics does occur.
by Robert W Carter
NCSE Gives ‘Favorable’ Review of The Voyage the Shook the World
Anti-creationists praise aspects of Darwin: the Voyage, but have to milk some criticisms, which turn out to be rather trivial or unjustifiable.
by Dr Robert Carter
A river like no other
On Charles Darwin’s Beagle voyage, his geological observations using Charles Lyell’s book reinforced his belief in long ages, and underpinned his later evolutionary ideas. But modern geology denies many of his interpretations.
by Emil Silvestru
Darwin, Lyell and Origin of Species
Charles Darwin
by Dominic Statham
‘The child is father of the man’
The attitudes of the young Charles Darwin help us understand his later theorizing.
by Graham Fisher
Holy war
Who really opposed Darwin? Popular belief has it back to front …
by James Foard
Darwinism: it was all in the family
Darwinism began not with Charles but with his grandfather Erasmus.
by Russell Grigg