Explore the science that turns static views of nature into a story of change.
In The First Principles of Evolution, S. Herbert offers a clear, guided introduction to how evolution works and why it matters. The book draws a line from ancient ideas about a moving universe to modern evolutionary thinking, helping readers see the big picture of life, matter, and the cosmos.
Readers will learn to distinguish evolution as a natural process from specific theories that try to explain it. The discussion covers the range of topics from inorganic to organic evolution, and it examines major theories like Lamarckism, Darwinism, and Neo-Darwinism, along with related ideas such as germinal selection and panmixia. The approach emphasizes understanding over memorization, with attention to how ideas change when new evidence arrives.
- How evolution is defined as a universal process, not just a single theory.
- Differences between the broad concept of evolution and its specific explanations.
- Key debates about how traits develop, change, and persist in populations.
- Foundational theories and how scientists test their ideas against evidence.
Ideal for readers of science history and evolution who want a solid, approachable overview without spoilers or heavy jargon.