a triply fascinating book that contains original research and interpretations full of insight

Adrian Barnett, New Scientist

In Darwin's Shadow is the gripping story of the heretical British naturalist Alfred Russel Wallace who co-discovered natural selection independently of his more well-known contemporary Charles Darwin. Utilizing a number of never-before-used archival sources that bring to bear new interpretations of this most fascinating scientists, best-selling author Michael Shermer applies his training in both the history of science and psychology to reveal the life, science, and personality of Wallace to unravel the mystery of his scientific, quasi-scientific, and non-scientific ideas. Shermer's unique approach goes beyond narrative story-telling to analyse the science, culture, and ideas that lie beneath the life story, in a path-breaking approach to biography. Shermer presents the two major points of intersection and conflict between Wallace and Darwin, one so radical that Darwin accused his younger colleague of intellectual murder! Wallace has always appealed to lovers of travel and adventure stories, because that is the life he led: In Darwin's Shadow will also appeal to historians of science, readers of popular science, and fans of Shermer's previous books.
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Virtually unknown today, Alfred Russel Wallace was the co-discoverer of natural selection with Darwin and an eminent scientist who stood out among his peers as a man of formidable mind and outsized personality. In this biography, Michael Shermer aims to rescue him from the history's sidelines.
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Introduction: Genesis and Revelation ; Prologue: The Psychology of Biography ; 1. Uncertain Beginnings ; 2. The Evolution of a Naturalist ; 3. Breaching the Walls of the Species Citadel ; 4. The Mystery of Mysteries Solved ; 5. A Gentlemanly Arrangement ; 6. Scientific Heresy and Ideological Murder ; 7. A Scientist Among the Spiritualists ; 8. Heretical Thoughts ; 9. Heretical Culture ; 10. Heretic Personality ; 11. The Last Great Victorian ; 12. The Life of Wallace and the Nature of History ; Epilogue: Psychobiography and the Science of History ; Appendix I: Endnotes ; Appendix II: Biography of Wallace's Archival Sources ; Appendix III: Biography of Wallace's Published Works ; Appendix IV: General Biography ; Index
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`'Shermer's description of Wallace's life is excellent, and the bibliography of his publications and manuscript sources is the most complete to date' James Mallet, Nature `clearly written, with perceptive detailed analysis of several key issues in the history of evolution and an excellent bibliography' P. S. Harper, Human Genetics
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An insightful biography of one of the greatest but least heralded scientists of the nineteenth century
Dr Michael Shermer is the Founding Publisher of Skeptic magazine, the Director of the Skeptics Society, and a monthly columnist for Scientific American. His latest book is The Borderlands of Science (OUP, 2001), about the fuzzy land between science and pseudoscience. He wrote Denying History, on Holocaust denial and other forms of historical distortion, How We Believe: The Search for God in an Age of Science, which presents his theory on the origins of religion and why people believe in God, and Why People Believe Weird Things.
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A gripping narrative about one of the most controversial scientists in history Explores the many facets of this polymathic genius, and delves into the many eccentric and fringe causes championed by Wallace throughout his career, including anti-vaccination, conservation of the environment, crime and punishment, eugenics, socialism, religion and the role of institutionalized churches, and women's rights and suffrage
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Product details

ISBN
9780195148305
Published
2002
Publisher
Oxford University Press; Oxford University Press
Weight
816 gr
Height
241 mm
Width
165 mm
Thickness
36 mm
Age
G, 01
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Number of pages
448

Biographical note

Dr Michael Shermer is the Founding Publisher of Skeptic magazine, the Director of the Skeptics Society, and a monthly columnist for Scientific American. His latest book is The Borderlands of Science (OUP, 2001), about the fuzzy land between science and pseudoscience. He wrote Denying History, on Holocaust denial and other forms of historical distortion, How We Believe: The Search for God in an Age of Science, which presents his theory on the origins of religion and why people believe in God, and Why People Believe Weird Things.