The French aristocrat who understood evolution 100 years before Darwin – and even worried about climate change
by Donna Ferguson from Science | The Guardian on (#6KX5E)
Georges-Louis Leclerc proposed species change and extinction back in the 1740s, a new book reveals
Shortly after Charles Darwin published his magnum opus, The Origin of Species, in 1859 he started reading a little-known 100-year-old work by a wealthy French aristocrat.
Its contents were quite a surprise. Whole pages [of his book] are laughably like mine," Darwin wrote to a friend. It is surprising how candid it makes one to see one's view in another man's words."
In later editions of The Origin of Species, Darwin acknowledged Georges-Louis Leclerc, Comte de Buffon, as one of the few" people who had understood that species change and evolve, before Darwin himself.
Continue reading...