In Darwin's shadow, a socialist pioneer of evolution
http://socialismtheoryandpractice.blogspot.com/2012/01/in-darwins-shadow-socialist-pioneer-of.html
"The man was writhing in the grips of Malaria. A torrent of tropical rain beat on the roof of his Indonesian hut. In the calm interludes between the sweats and chills, he wrote about ideas big ones. It was 1856, and naturalist Alfred Russel Wallace was writing about how species evolve.
"Little known today, Wallace went on to become the co-discoverer, with Charles Darwin, of the theory of natural selection, the engine behind evolution. And he became a socialist.
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"Wallace was respectful of Darwin and his work. In 1882, he was a pallbearer at Darwins funeral. But he also differed from the famous biologist in some important ways. While both saw the importance of the environment, it was Wallace who developed this more in his later writing. And he did it from a working-class perspective. Note this sentence from his 1909 paper The Plunder of the Earth: The struggle for wealth, and its deplorable results
have been accompanied by a reckless destruction of the storied-up products of nature, which is even more deplorable because more irretrievable.
"Wallace was the first president of the Land Nationalization Society of England. His advanced political ideas helped him avoid the pitfalls that trapped other 19th century evolutionists. Edward Bellamys utopian Looking Backward convinced Wallace of the socialist alternative. He opposed social Darwinism and eugenics. He understood that class-driven economics and politics, not biology, had much to do with the corruption and injustices of society."
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