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Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 2012

Pages: 201-210

ISBN (Hardback): 9788847019737

Full citation:

Volker Gerhardt, "Evolution", in: The theory of evolution and its impact, Berlin, Springer, 2012

Evolution

remarks on the history of a concept adopted by Darwin

Volker Gerhardt

pp. 201-210

in: Aldo Fasolo (ed), The theory of evolution and its impact, Berlin, Springer, 2012

Abstract

Evolution is a term invented by the Philosopher Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz at the beginning of eighteenth century. Referring to the latin verbum evolvere, "evolution" means the step by step development of the organism from the ovum up to the grown up exemplar. This conception includes the thesis, that all organisms were totally preformed in the first real exemplar of living being at all. This thesis was sharply criticized by Immanuel Kant. He saw that there would be neither learning nor variation in history of life when Leibniz should be right. But in his political and cultural philosophy Kant contrasted "evolution" against "revolution" and gave it the meaning of a continual historical development. It was this understanding that influenced Darwin in choosing evolution for his description of the process of natural development. So one of the fundamental concepts of the modern science of nature is derived from philosophy, but not in its biological sense in the tradition of Leibniz, but in the political dimension as Kant pointed out.

Cited authors

Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 2012

Pages: 201-210

ISBN (Hardback): 9788847019737

Full citation:

Volker Gerhardt, "Evolution", in: The theory of evolution and its impact, Berlin, Springer, 2012