Much is being made in this bicentennial year of Lincoln's birth of the stunnning coincidence that Charles Darwin was also born on the very same day, February 12, 1809. Nobody can possibly think of another world class coincidence like it, short of the surreal fact that Thomas Jefferson and John Adams died on the same day in 1826--and on July 4, yet.
But Lincoln and Darwin--two of the preeminent giants of the 19th millenium, born on the same day in the same year--only hours apart! And what a chronological couple those two make! No two men have left such huge handprints on our world. Lincoln, by seeing the Union through the agony of civil war and disunion, saved the America that has became arguably the greatest and most powerful nation on the planet, and the beacon of republican and democratic government that nearly all nations strive to emulate. In succeeding, he also rooted out slavery in its last major entrenched stronghold in the world. Had he not succeeded, history would have been entirely different. He left us a legacy that has endured and survived the test of time.
And so did Darwin leave a huge world-changing legacy that has stood the test of time. He unlocked the secret of all life on earth with his study of the origin and evolution of species, including man. His core theory for a century and a half has stood the test of the most intense scrutiny in the history of science. And it has endured. One scientist has said "I am struck with the fact daily that the more information we accumlate, the more validation we find of Darwin's theory." Another has said, "I think this [today] is a new golden age of evolutionary science. But what we're really doing is fleshing out Darwin's idea in ever greater detail." Indeed, as yet another scientist has said, "Darwin didn't know 99 percent of what we know," but, "the 1 percent he did know was the most important part."
What these two giants left us, the important part they left us, whether they knew it would be so or not, is even more mind-boggling than the fact they were born on the same day. Life has its wonders.
Friday, March 20, 2009
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
3 comments:
I've been to the Galapagos Islands. It's surreal.
Do you think Darwin got it right?
He definitely got it right by going to the Galapagos. Those finches are amazing. If natural selection is the only way that things evolve, hmmm? If I have ever actually read On The Origin Of Species, hmmm?
Post a Comment