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Myth 6 - That Darwin’s Galápagos Finches Inspired His Most Important Evolutionary Insights

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 May 2024

Kostas Kampourakis
Affiliation:
Université de Genève
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Summary

It is widely believed that Darwin’s Galápagos finches inspired his theory of natural selection. Nothing could be further from the truth.  Darwin’s failure to label his Galápagos finch specimens by island, and his lack of useful behavioral observations about the differing diets of these birds, limited his ability to argue that their diverse beaks had evolved by natural selection to fill different ecological niches. For these reasons, these birds are not even mentioned in the Origin of Species. As is well established by historians of science, and as is further supported by Darwin’s own testimony, his revolutionary theory of natural selection was inspired by his reading of Thomas Robert Malthus’s book On Population in September 1838, three years after Darwin’s historic visit to the Galápagos Islands and two years after his return to England on the Beagle.  What Darwin’s Galápagos birds, including the famous finches, helped him to understand is that species often grade insensibly into one another and that varieties, as he later argued in the Origin of Species, are “incipient species.” It was the largely underappreciated existence of this variability among species in nature that allowed Darwin to grasp how natural selection might give rise to new species. Inspired in part by David Lack’s (1947) influential book Darwin’s Finches, the pervasive myth associated with these iconic birds is a classic instance of how important scientific discoveries often become telescoped around a dramatic moment of eureka-like insight, obscuring what typically proves to be a more protracted and conceptually multifaceted processes of scientific innovation.

Type
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Darwin Mythology
Debunking Myths, Correcting Falsehoods
, pp. 68 - 79
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2024

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