ALDO LEOPOLD ON DARWIN February 24, 2007
Posted by thenaturalist in Aldo Leopold, Darwin.trackback
Also Leopold wrote in 1947: “It is now a century since Darwin gave us the first glimpse of the origin of the species. We now know what was unknown to all the preceding caravan of generations: that men are only fellow-voyagers with other creatures in the odyssey of evolution. This new knowledge should have given us, by this time, a sense of kinship with fellow-creatures; a wish to live and let live; a sense of wonder over the magnitude and duration of the biotic enterprise…. Above all we should, in the century since Darwin, have come to know that man, while now captain of the adventuring ship, is hardly the sole object of its quest, and that his prior assumptions to this effect arose from the simple necessity of whistling in the dark.”
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