Enlightenment & 1800s · 1809–1882
Darwin
“Where do humans come from?”
Charles Darwin showed that living things weren't created all at once in their current form — they evolved gradually over millions of years. Creatures with traits that help them survive are more likely to have offspring, passing those traits on. This ‘natural selection’ slowly reshapes life — and means humans share ancestors with apes and all other living things.
“From so simple a beginning, endless forms most beautiful are being evolved.”
The big idea
Darwin's theory of evolution by natural selection explains life's huge variety: individuals vary, more are born than can survive, and those with helpful traits survive and reproduce, passing the traits on. Over vast time this slowly produces new species — including humans.
What they changed
Evolution is the unifying foundation of all modern biology and medicine, and it transformed how humans understand their place in nature — not separate from animals, but part of one branching tree of life.
The controversy
Darwin's ideas clashed fiercely with a literal reading of the Bible's creation story, sparking science-vs-religion debates that continue in some places today. His theory was also later misused to justify ‘social Darwinism’ and racism — ideas his actual science does not support.
In their words
- “It is the long history of humankind… that those who learned to collaborate most effectively have prevailed.” — commonly attributed to Charles Darwin
- “A man who dares to waste one hour of time has not discovered the value of life.” — Charles Darwin
✦ A curious detail
As a young man, Darwin sailed around the world for almost five years on a ship called HMS Beagle, gathering the evidence that led to his theory.
Read further
Portrait: Photograph of Charles Darwin, seated. Public domain · via Wikimedia Commons.
Meet Darwin on the voyage
A curated lecture, a short enquiry, and a wax-seal medallion to acquire — and the next thinker unlocks. No account, no password.
Begin the voyage