Explore how energy, matter, and natural processes shape the story of life.
This Acton Prize essay presents evolution as a workable scientific idea from a physiologist’s viewpoint, while offering a thoughtful check on how it relates to belief and meaning. It aims to give readers the reasons to accept evolution in a concise, accessible form, without claiming to be the final authority.
The author writes for those who already accept evolution in some form and seeks to clarify the case with practical, reasoned discussion. Readers will encounter the plan, scope, and key concepts of evolution as a natural, testable account of life’s origins and changes over time, from a medical and naturalist perspective.
- Two main origins theories are reviewed: separate creation and gradual evolution from simpler beginnings.
- Evidence for evolution is examined, including how organisms relate to their environments and how structure develops.
- Topics cover variation, inheritance, nutrition, and how these relate to reproduction and adaptation.
- The discussion also touches on how evolution intersects with philosophical and religious views.
Ideal for readers seeking a concise, thoughtful bridge between science and belief in the history of evolutionary thought.