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Darwin's sacred cause: race, slavery and the quest for human origins

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In this remarkable book Adrian Desmond and James Moore, world authorities on Darwin, give a completely new explanation of how Darwin came to his famous view of evolution, which traced all life to an ancient common ancestor. Darwin was committed to the abolition of slavery, in part because of his family's deeply held beliefs. It was his 'Sacred Cause' and at its core lay a belief in human racial unity. Desmond and Moore show how he extended to all life the idea of human brotherhood held by those who fought to abolish slavery, so developing our modern view of evolution.

Desmond and Moore argue that only by understanding Darwin's Christian abolitionist inheritance can we shed new light on the perplexing mix of personal drive, public hesitancy and scientific radicalism that led him finally in 1871 to publishThe Descent of Man,andSelection in Relation to Sex. The result is an epoch-making study of this eminent Victorian.

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£22.50
Product Details
Penguin
0141908386 / 9780141908380
eBook (EPUB)
07/01/2010
England
English
477 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
Reprint. Description based on print version record. Originally published: London: Allen Lane, 2009.