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  2. Religious views of Charles Darwin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_views_of_Charles...

    As a child, Darwin attended Shrewsbury Unitarian Church.. Charles Darwin was born during the Napoleonic Wars and grew up in their aftermath, a conservative time when Tory-dominated government closely associated with the established Anglican Church of England repressed Radicalism, but when family memories recalled the 18th-century Enlightenment and a multitude of Non-conformist churches held ...

  3. Universal Darwinism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universal_Darwinism

    Universal Darwinism, also known as generalized Darwinism, universal selection theory, [1] or Darwinian metaphysics, [2] [3] [4] is a variety of approaches that extend the theory of Darwinism beyond its original domain of biological evolution on Earth. Universal Darwinism aims to formulate a generalized version of the mechanisms of variation ...

  4. Evolutionary theodicy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolutionary_theodicy

    According to Russell and Southgate, even though Darwinian evolution does include animal suffering, it was the only way God could create the goodness of the world. "A universe with the sort of beauty, diversity, sentience and sophistication of creatures that the biosphere now contains" could only come about by the natural processes of evolution.

  5. Darwinism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Darwinism

    Charles Darwin in 1868. Darwinism is a term used to describe a theory of biological evolution developed by the English naturalist Charles Darwin (1809–1882) and others. The theory states that all species of organisms arise and develop through the natural selection of small, inherited variations that increase the individual's ability to compete, survive, and reproduce.

  6. Watchmaker analogy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Watchmaker_analogy

    In the 19th century, deists, who championed the watchmaker analogy, held that Darwin's theory fit with "the principle of uniformitarianism—the idea that all processes in the world occur now as they have in the past" and that deistic evolution "provided an explanatory framework for understanding species variation in a mechanical universe."

  7. Objections to evolution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Objections_to_evolution

    Objections to evolution have been raised since evolutionary ideas came to prominence in the 19th century. When Charles Darwin published his 1859 book On the Origin of Species, his theory of evolution (the idea that species arose through descent with modification from a single common ancestor in a process driven by natural selection) initially met opposition from scientists with different ...

  8. The eclipse of Darwinism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_eclipse_of_Darwinism

    He proposed that natural selection could be a mechanism in which the problem of evil of suffering produced the greater good of adaptation, but conceded that this had difficulties and suggested that God might influence the variations on which natural selection acted to guide evolution. [23] For Darwin and Thomas Henry Huxley such pervasive ...

  9. Why Darwin Matters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Why_Darwin_Matters

    Therefore he proposed that God had started the planets in motion. But astronomers now have a very good understanding of how the solar system formed, and there is no need for a supernatural explanation. Methodological naturalism is a term that means that life and the behavior of the universe are the result of natural processes.