Darwin's Temple of Deceit

Darwin's Temple of Deceit
Author: Yitzhak Salomon
Publisher:
Total Pages: 801
Release: 2019-01-14
Genre:
ISBN: 9781794112957

DISCLAIMER: Those who claim that LIFE evolved by coincidence NEED NOT read this book. For all those who believe that LIFE was created by God, this book is a MUST READ! * * * After reading this manuscript, a learned friend of mine inquired, "Yitzhak, what gives you the license to write about the subject of Evolution... when we all know that you are not a scientist?" "One does not need to be a scientist," replied I, "in order to write about science fiction!" * * * In the spring of 2000, the University of Washington geology department sponsored a lecture by the renowned Chinese paleontologist Jun-Yuan Chen. As it happens, the fossils Professor Chen dug up near the town of Chengjiang in China turn Darwin's tree of life upside down. Chen's discovery also clearly debunks gradualism, a central pillar of Darwinian Evolutionary Theory. In his presentation, Professor Cheng highlighted the apparent contradiction between the Chinese fossil evidence and Darwinian orthodoxy. Unable to hide his displeasure, one professor in the audience asked Chen whether he wasn't apprehensive about expressing his doubts about Darwinism so freely -- especially given China's reputation for suppressing dissenting opinion. A wry smile spread across his face, Professor Chen responded: "In China we can criticize Darwin, but not the government. In America, you can criticize the government, but not Darwin." * * *

The Poetry of Erasmus Darwin

The Poetry of Erasmus Darwin
Author: Martin Priestman
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 363
Release: 2016-02-24
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1317020979

While historians of science have focused significant attention on Erasmus Darwin’s scientific ideas and milieu, relatively little attention has been paid to Darwin as a literary writer. In The Poetry of Erasmus Darwin: Enlightened Spaces, Romantic Times, Martin Priestman situates Darwin’s three major poems - The Loves of the Plants (1789), The Economy of Vegetation (1791) and The Temple of Nature (1803) - and Darwin himself within a large, polymathic late-Enlightenment network of other scientists, writers, thinkers and social movers and shakers. Interpreting Darwin’s poetry in terms of Darwin’s broader sense of the poetic text as a material space, he posits a significant shift from the Enlightenment’s emphases on conceptual spaces to the Romantic period’s emphases on historical time. He shows how Darwin’s poetry illuminates his stance toward all the major physical sciences and his well-formulated theories of evolution and materially based psychology. Priestman’s study also offers the first substantial accounts of Darwin’s mythological theories and their links to Enlightenment Rosicrucianism and Freemansonry, and of the reading of history that emerges from the fragment-poem The Progress of Society, a first-ever printed edition of which is included in an appendix. Ultimately, Priestman’s book offers readers a sustained account of Darwin’s polymathic Enlightenment worldview and cognate poetics in a period when texts are too often judged by their adherence to a retrospectively constructed ’Romanticism’.

The Temple of Nature

The Temple of Nature
Author: Erasmus Darwin
Publisher: BoD – Books on Demand
Total Pages: 198
Release: 2020-07-30
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 3752374144

Reproduction of the original: The Temple of Nature by Erasmus Darwin

Worm Work

Worm Work
Author: Janelle A. Schwartz
Publisher: U of Minnesota Press
Total Pages: 306
Release: 2012
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0816673217

Worms. Natural history is riddled with them. Literature is crawling with them. From antiquity to today, the ubiquitous and multiform worm provokes an immediate discomfort and unconscious distancing: it remains us against them in anthropocentric anxiety. So there is always something muddled, or dirty, or even offensive when talking about worms. Rehabilitating the lowly worm into a powerful aesthetic trope, Janelle A. Schwartz proposes a new framework for understanding such a strangely animate nature. Worms, she declares, are the very matter with which the Romantics rethought the relationship between a material world in constant flux and the human mind working to understand it. Worm Work studies the lesser-known natural historical records of Abraham Trembley and his contemporaries and the familiar works of Erasmus Darwin, Charles Darwin, William Blake, Mary Shelley, and John Keats, to expose the worm as an organism that is not only reviled as a taxonomic terror but revered as a sign of great order in nature as well as narrative. This book traces a pattern of cultural production, a vermiculture that is as transformative of matter as it is of mind. It distinguishes decay or division as positive processes in Romantic era writings, compounded by generation or renewal and used to represent the biocentric, complex structuring of organicism. Offering the worm as an archetypal figure through which to recast the evolution of a literary order alongside questions of taxonomy from 1740 to 1820 and on, Schwartz unearths Romanticism as a rich humus of natural historical investigation and literary creation.

Darwin's Ghosts

Darwin's Ghosts
Author: Rebecca Stott
Publisher: A&C Black
Total Pages: 402
Release: 2013-01-01
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1408831015

Soon after publication of On the Origin of Species, Charles Darwin received a letter that deeply unsettled him. He had expected outrage and accusations of heresy, but this letter was different: it accused him of taking credit for a theory that wasn't his. Yet when he tried to trace his intellectual forebears, he found that history had already forgotten them...Rediscovering Aristotle on the shores of Lesbos and Leonardo da Vinci fossil hunting in the Tuscan hills, this is a masterful retelling of the collective daring of a few like-minded men, whose early theories flew in the face of prevailing political and religious orthodoxies and laid the foundations for Darwin's revolutionary idea.

Darwin's Cathedral

Darwin's Cathedral
Author: David Sloan Wilson
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Total Pages: 277
Release: 2010-09-16
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0226901378

One of the great intellectual battles of modern times is between evolution and religion. Until now, they have been considered completely irreconcilable theories of origin and existence. David Sloan Wilson's Darwin's Cathedral takes the radical step of joining the two, in the process proposing an evolutionary theory of religion that shakes both evolutionary biology and social theory at their foundations. The key, argues Wilson, is to think of society as an organism, an old idea that has received new life based on recent developments in evolutionary biology. If society is an organism, can we then think of morality and religion as biologically and culturally evolved adaptations that enable human groups to function as single units rather than mere collections of individuals? Wilson brings a variety of evidence to bear on this question, from both the biological and social sciences. From Calvinism in sixteenth-century Geneva to Balinese water temples, from hunter-gatherer societies to urban America, Wilson demonstrates how religions have enabled people to achieve by collective action what they never could do alone. He also includes a chapter considering forgiveness from an evolutionary perspective and concludes by discussing how all social organizations, including science, could benefit by incorporating elements of religion. Religious believers often compare their communities to single organisms and even to insect colonies. Astoundingly, Wilson shows that they might be literally correct. Intended for any educated reader, Darwin's Cathedral will change forever the way we view the relations among evolution, religion, and human society.

Invoking the Beyond:

Invoking the Beyond:
Author: Paul D. Collins
Publisher: iUniverse
Total Pages: 1031
Release: 2020-11-22
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1663213542

The Gnostic revival of the Enlightenment witnessed the erection of what could be called the “Kantian Rift,” an epistemological barrier between external reality and the mind of the percipient. Arbitrarily proclaimed by German philosopher Immanuel Kant, this barrier rendered the world as a terra incognita. Suddenly, the world “out there” was deemed imperceptible and unknowable. In addition to the outer world, the cherished metaphysical certainties of antiquity—the soul, a transcendent order, and God—swiftly evaporated. The way was paved for a new set of modern mythmakers who would populate the world “out there” with their own surrogates for the Divine. Collectively, these surrogates could be referred to as the Beyond because they epistemologically and ontologically overwhelm humanity. In recent years, the Beyond has been invoked by theoreticians, literary figures, intelligence circles, and deep state operatives who share some variant of a technocratic vision for the world. In turn, these mythmakers have either directly or indirectly served elitist interests that have been working toward the establishment of a global government and the creation of a New Man. Their hegemony has been legitimized through the invocation of a wrathful earth goddess, a technological Singularity, a superweapon, and extraterrestrial “gods.” All of these are merely masks for the same counterfeit divinity... the Beyond.

Darwin's Nightmare

Darwin's Nightmare
Author: Mike Knowles
Publisher: ECW Press
Total Pages: 208
Release: 2008-10-01
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1554903343

Hard-hitting crime fiction from the author of Tin Men: “Fans of Charlie Huston and Chuck Palahniuk will probably enjoy Darwin’s Nightmare” (Sacramento Book Review). Wilson spent his entire life under the radar. Few people knew who he was or how to find him. Only two people even knew what he really did—working jobs for one very bad man, illegal jobs no one could ever know about. Wilson was invisible—until the day he crossed the line and risked everything to save the last connection to humanity he had, earning the hatred of a vengeful mob boss, a man who claimed he was Charles Darwin’s worst nightmare. Moving even deeper into the underworld of Hamilton, Ontario, he became a ghost in the city—until one day he took on what seemed like a simple job. Steal a bag from the airport and hand it off. No one said what was in the bag, and no one mentioned who the real owners were or what they would do to get it back. But the bag would set into motion a violent chain of events from which no one will escape untouched . . . “A very good series.” —Booklist “Merciless but honest about being monstrous, Wilson is worthy to stand next to Loren Estleman’s Peter Macklin and Donald Westlake’s Parker.” —Publishers Weekly