10 Strange And Interesting Facts About Charles Darwin
10 Darwin Was Mocked For Being Religious
The celebrated scientist is perhaps the most popular mascot for the atheist movement despite Darwin declaring himself agnostic
during the later years of his life. He barely talked about his personal
beliefs, except in his autobiography, and disliked talking about the
implications of his theories on current theological doctrines, admitting
that he knew very little about religion.
However, during his voyages, Darwin was known for being quite religious. In his autobiography, he recalled how he was mocked by officers of the HMS Beagle
for believing that the Bible is a final authority on morality. Though
he wasn’t very active in religious circles, the young Darwin had a firm
conviction that God existed and that the soul is immortal. While in
Brazil, the naturalist was so engrossed by the beauty of nature that he
proclaimed it as the manifestation of a higher being.
Darwin had a difficult time making a transition to agnosticism. In
fact, when he was beginning to question the existence of God, he said
that he couldn’t appreciate the beauty of nature with the same religious
vigor as he had when he was young. comparing the feeling to being
“colorblind.”
9 Darwin Ate The Animals He Encountered
Darwin had a strange stomach for weird food. During his time in Cambridge, Darwin belonged to a culinary group called the Glutton Club
whose members would meet each week to try various “exotic” dishes
previously unknown to the human palate. To the Glutton Club, “exotic”
isn’t just anything that isn’t crumpets and tea. The group is known to
casually chow down meats of various wild birds like hawks and bitterns.
When the young naturalist was given the chance to go aboard the HMS Beagle,
he rekindled his liking for undiscovered delicacies. During his trip,
he was able to feast on armadillos, which he said “taste and look like
duck.” He also had on his plate an unnamed, chocolate-colored rodent
that he described as the best meat he ever tasted. Darwin would even
discover a whole new species of a bird on his dinner plate, which would
later be named after him: Rhea darwinii.
In Galapagos, Darwin rode tortoises and drank fluid from their bladders, which he described as “quite limpid and [having] only a very slightly bitter taste.” While on board the Beagle
going to Tahiti, the crew lived on tortoise flesh for weeks, throwing
the shells of the tortoise off the sea after they were done with them.
His gastronomic exploits went even more extreme in South America, where
he recalled eating a very white meat. At first, the naturalist felt a
bit squeamish, thinking he was eating the meat of a calf. He was
relieved to learn that he was instead eating the flesh of a puma, even comparing its taste to that of veal.
To commemorate Darwin’s life and his gourmet adventures, fans of the celebrated scientist meet every February for the Phylum Feast.
It is an evolution-themed potluck dinner of delicacies made from as
many different types of species as possible. Some of the foods that have
been listed on the menu are Crusted Crustacea, Mollusca Salad,
Primordial Soup, and Hunter-Gatherer Pie.
8 Darwin Inspired Karl Marx
Some people blame Charles Darwin’s theories for the ills of capitalism. A
few of the first people to embrace natural selection applied it
immediately to economy and society, thus giving birth to social Darwinism.
Adherents of social Darwinism believe that a person’s economic success
or failure is akin to an animal’s struggle for survival in the jungle.
Social Darwinists discourage government assistance and charitable
activities that help the poor because they believe the human species
will grow stronger if society just allowed poor people—or the “unfit”—to
die off. Notorious social Darwinists include the two wealthiest men of
their time, Andrew Carnegie and John Rockefeller.
Though Darwin himself admitted to not having an adequate
understanding of politics and economy, his theories undoubtedly affected
the growth and greed of capitalism during the early 20th century.
Because of this, most people assume that natural selection wasn’t
well-received by those who opposed capitalism.
Surprisingly, the opposite is quite true. Charles Darwin actually had
a huge positive influence on the opposite end of the spectrum. While
social Darwinists saw Darwin’s theories as a way to justify greed and
oppression, Karl Marx viewed them as an allegory for class struggles.
The German philosopher saw Darwin’s Origin of Species as the biological basis of socialism.
He stated that the struggle and survival of organisms affirmed the
existence of class struggles that he observed to happen in the society.
As an organism fights to survive in a hostile environment, a class must
also fight against those who are exploiting them. The scientist’s
influence on Karl Marx was so great that the famed socialist even
planned on dedicating his book, Das Kapital, to the naturalist—a gesture that the latter respectfully declined.
7 Darwin The Psychologist
During his time with the Beagle, Darwin had the privilege of
encountering various colorful cultures around the world. There were
obvious language barriers that prevented him from communicating with the
locals, but he noted that the emotions the people expressed—happiness,
sadness, fear, and anger—didn’t seem to differ much from culture to
culture. This would be the beginning of Charles Darwin’s lesser-known
career in psychology and the eventual development of the concept of universal emotions.
He corresponded with many scientists to study this phenomenon, which
included a French physician named Guillaume-Benjamin-Amand Duchenne.
Duchenne studied facial muscles and proposed that all human faces
expressed up to 60 different types of emotions. He’s most famous for the
slides he captured of people’s faces stimulated with electricity to
produce these 60 types of emotions.
However, Darwin disagreed that all 60 of these emotions were
universal. He believed that only a few of these emotions were common
across all human beings. To test his hypothesis, Darwin conducted an
experiment using 11 of Duchenne’s slides. He placed them in random order
and showed them one at a time to 20 participants, asking them what they
made out of the slides. Almost all of Darwin’s participants agreed that
some slides showed certain emotions like anger, happiness, and fear.
The rest of the slides, however, appeared more ambiguous and the
participants didn’t agree on a single emotion. This confirmed Darwin’s
hypothesis of just a few universal emotions.
Darwin also dabbled with social psychology when he took interest in the human concept of compassion.
Darwin believed that our sense of moral compassion stemmed from our
natural desire to alleviate the suffering of others. Coincidentally, his
ideas about compassion were very similar to the teachings of Tibetan
Buddhism. Recently, upon learning about Darwin’s writings on the
subject, the 14th Dalai Lama declared “I am now calling myself a
Darwinian.”
6 Darwin’s Hilarious Take On Marriage
While the fact that Darwin married his own cousin,
Emma Wedgewood, is very well-known, the events prior to their union
aren’t as fairly revealed. In the months before his marriage, Darwin
wasn’t very thrilled about tying the knot. He wrote an amusing list of pros and cons on the facets of marriage.
One upside Darwin saw to getting married was children:
“Children — (if it Please God) — Constant companion, friend in
old age) who will feel interested in one, — object to be beloved &
played with. — better than a dog anyhow”.
Darwin also liked the idea of a female companion:
“My God, it is intolerable to think of spending one’s whole life, like a
neuter bee, working, working, nothing after all. — No, no won’t
do. — Imagine living all one’s day solitarily in smoky dirty London
House. — Only picture to yourself a nice soft wife on a sofa with good
fire, ; books music perhaps — Compare this vision with the
dingy reality of Grt. Marlbro’ St.”
On the other hand, Darwin felt that taking the celibate path also had its benefits:
“Freedom to go where one liked — choice of Society little of it. —
Conversation of clever men at clubs — Not forced to visit relatives, to bend in every trifle. — to have the expense anxiety of
children — perhaps quarelling — Loss of time. — cannot read in the
Evenings — fatness; idleness…”
These are but a few of the items Darwin included on his list that
prove Darwin was just like every other guy. Eventually, he would decide
to marry Wedgewood and even call the day of his proposal the “Day of
days.” The couple would be happily married for 43 years until Darwin’s
death in 1882 and have 10 children.
5 Darwin And Water Therapy
Darwin wasn’t very fit. While there were many speculations on what made
him very ill during the course of his life, he didn’t receive an
accurate diagnosis of his condition until more than 100 years after his death.
Because of the limitations of medicine during his time, there was no
satisfying treatment to help him cope with his varying symptoms, but he
found comfort from a very questionable source—water therapy.
In a letter he sent to his close friend, botanist Joseph Dalton
Hooker, Darwin complained that he had been suffering from continuous
vomiting. He also reported hand tremors and dizziness, which he presumed
to result from the impact of the incessant vomiting on his nervous
system. Upon reading a book by a certain Dr. Gully about water therapy,
the naturalist became so interested with the treatment that he moved
with his family to a rented apartment near Dr. Gully’s clinic to receive
care from the specialist.
Dr. Gully subjected the naturalist to various strange procedures,
which included heating him up with a “spirit lamp” until he perspired
and then immediately rubbing him violently with towels soaked with cold
water. He was also given cold foot baths and had to wear a wet compress
on his stomach all day. Surprisingly, Darwin found the bizarre and
unscientific treatment to be quite effective, recalling that he saw
massive improvements with his health after the eighth day of his
consultations with Dr. Gully. In the same letter addressed to Hooker, he
declared that he felt “certain that the Water Cure is no quackery.”
4 Darwin The Earthquake Detective
At least 25 major earthquakes
have been recorded to happen within the Chilean border since 1730, all
of which have collectively killed thousands of people. Darwin had the
unpleasant opportunity to experience one of these terrible tremors—the 1835 earthquake of Concepcion.
The earthquake was very strong, measuring at a magnitude of 8.8 on
the Richter scale. The earthquake, which occurred for two minutes, only
took six seconds to demolish the entire city. During the time of the
quake, Darwin was traveling with the Beagle. When it reached
the coast of Concepcion, Darwin immediately began to investigate the
nature and origin of the earthquake. He described the devastation as
“the most awful yet interesting spectacle I ever beheld.”
He made observations on the earthquake’s aftereffects, noticing that
the coastline of Chile became permanently elevated, particularly the
island of Santa Maria, which had grown 3 meters (10 ft) higher than its
original altitude. He gathered his own observations and combined them
with the local people’s testimonies to reconstruct the events prior and
during the earthquake. After weeks of detective work, Darwin found out
that the earthquake may have been caused by a chain of volcanoes along
the coastline of Chile erupting shortly before the earthquake’s
occurrence.
3 Darwin’s Deathbed “Conversion”
During the latter half of the 19th century, Darwin was already quite popular in scientific circles. Meanwhile, a woman named Elizabeth Hope
was beginning to make a name for herself among evangelicals. Around
the early 1880s, when Darwin was already nearing his death, Elizabeth
Hope was just starting to become known in the evangelistic temperance
movement.
Darwin and Hope belonged to two separate worlds. The two of them
together in a single room seems too unlikely to happen, but a 1915
article from the Baptist newspaper Boston Watchman Examiner
claimed exactly that. The article detailed how Darwin invited the young
Elizabeth to his room and allegedly confessed his regret of developing
the theory of evolution. He went on to ask the evangelist to share with
his neighbors the message Jesus Christ and the salvation he brings to
mankind.
The story was very appealing to evangelicals during the time. To
learn that the mind behind the theory of evolution recanted his own
ideas and converted to Christianity didn’t just give them a way to
respond to so-called “evolutionists,” it also reaffirmed their faith in
the biblical story of creation.
However, this story was debunked as quickly and easily as it spread.
In Darwin’s autobiography, he repeatedly mentioned his dissociation with
Christianity and concluded that agnosticism would be the most correct
description of his state of mind. His son, Francis Darwin,
proclaimed that his father maintained an agnostic view in life even
until death. Darwin’s wife, who was very religious and would have loved
to see him return to Christianity, never mentioned any such conversion
taking place at Darwin’s death. She recalled that his last words were “remember what a good wife you have been to me” and that he “was not the least afraid to die.”
2 Darwin Was Neurotic
While Darwin suffered from many physical illnesses, some biographers of
the late scientist were more intrigued by his state of mind. The man who
exhibited incomparable brilliance during his lifetime would soon be
revealed in his letters to his friends that he suffered from obsessive thoughts which, in his own words, were “of horrid spectacle.”
These thoughts, which occurred mostly during the night, caused him
great distress. In a letter to his close confidante Dr. Hooker, Darwin
wrote “I could not sleep and whatever I did in the day haunted me at
night with vivid and most wearing repetition.” He was incessantly
paranoid that he was going to pass his many illnesses to his offspring.
He was also endlessly critical of his physical appearance, believing
himself to be quite ugly. The scientist needed constant reassurance from
others and found the need to utter a mantra hundreds of times to ease
his obsessive thoughts.
Prominent psychiatrist and Darwin’s biographer John Bowlby noted that the genius scientist wasn’t able to properly grieve his mother’s death
when he was young, which may have led to Darwin’s neurosis. It was in
the face of these mental hardships that Darwin would become one of the
most influential thinkers in history.
1 Ascension Island
In the south of the Atlantic 200 years ago, there was a tiny, isolated volcanic isle
1,600 kilometers (994 mi) off the coast of Africa called Ascension
Island. Dry and lifeless, the island was uninhabited from its discovery
in 1501 until 1815, when the British Royal Navy re-purposed it as a
military station to keep an eye on Napoleon during his exile on the
neighboring St. Helena. Today, the island is no longer dreary and
desolate. Ascension Island now boasts a lush landscape and a population of around 1,100—thanks to Darwin.
His five-year voyage with the Beagle was about to end and
the naturalist was eager to go home to London, where he heard his
discoveries had caused great excitement. The Beagle passed by
Ascension Island, where the sight of the apocalyptic island of bright
red volcanic cones and black lava inspired the inquisitive Darwin.
Shortly after Darwin returned to England, he and his close friend John
Hooker created a simple plan to convert the dry and lifeless island
into a “Little England.”
With the help of the British Royal Navy, the
two arranged for different species of plants from all over the world to
be planted on the island, beginning on 1850 and continuing every year
thereafter.
By the 1870s, the island’s highest peak had become significantly
greener after eucalyptus, Norfolk Island pine, bamboo, and banana took
over the island. Plants that weren’t usually seen side by side in other
places were seen together for the first time in Ascension Island. The
plants would also eventually harvest freshwater from the air, solving
the problem of the island’s lack of a water supply. While ecosystems
usually develop over millions of years, the artificial ecosystem created
by Darwin and Hooker blossomed only in a matter of decades.
Darwin’s project on the Ascension Island is the first of just a few
actual examples of “terraforming.” British ecologist David Wilkinson
says that NASA could learn a thing or two from Darwin’s methods when
they begin to do the same with Mars.
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