Mike Novack wrote:But maybe Darwin/evolution is a good example precisely because of a common misunderstanding.
The "problem" was reconciling theory and observations. What we see (what he and his contemporaries were seeing) is population of organisms organized in species with relatively narrow variation of form. In other words, if evolution were taking place, why were they not observing a continuum of form?
That's why his book was titled "Origin of the Species". Darwin was explaining why we would (at any spot in time) see the population of an organism organized as a species and the mechanism by which the characteristics of this species could change over time. Why we should expect to observe that even though evolution was taking place.
Understand? The opposition arguments of the day (*) were based on the expectation "if evolution were taking place we would be observing a continuum of form."
* I mean the scientific opposition to evolution, not the religious opposition to evolution.
I prefer Mendel's work over Darwin's, he came first quantitatively worked out the statistics for the inheritance of genes, and didn't marry his cousin, that's right the father of evolutionary theory married his cousin, most religions ban this practice, for good reason. The point here is that Darwin sort of stopped at the juicy part (man co-evolved from ape) and didn't really think his ideas all the way through.
I was reading the other day that the change of Ph in the sea is probably going to have a more significant and measurable impact than global warming, related to CO2, which makes sense to me since the atmosphere can expand when energy is added, unlike the sea which won't expand much.