Lee Richard V
Department of Medicine, State University of New York, Buffalo, NY, USA.
Rev Med Chil. 2009 Nov;137(11):1502-7. Epub 2010 Jan 13.
The story of how Charles Darwin composed The Origin of Species, published in November of 1859, has been told many times during the bicentennial of Darwin s birth and the sesquicentennial of the publication of the book. It is a history well known to biologists and historians of science. The heated debate that accompanied the demonstration of natural selection as a mechanism of speciation and continues to the present is surprising. Human beings do not welcome surprise: "the emotion aroused by something unexpected." The history of science and human intellect, however, illustrate the creative stimulus of surprise and serendipity in the development of human knowledge and the evolution of culture. The lives of Homo sapiens would not change if our intellect was unable or unwilling to respond to the unexpected and to make connections between surprising and commonplace events. The rich diversity of South American life was surprising to the European travelers of the 18th and 19th centuries: surprising by its beauty and profusion, but also by its similarities to the creatures of Europe and Africa. Darwin s curiosity sought and welcomed surprise).
查尔斯·达尔文撰写《物种起源》(于1859年11月出版)的故事,在达尔文诞辰二百周年及该书出版一百五十周年期间已被多次讲述。这是生物学家和科学史家熟知的一段历史。伴随着自然选择作为物种形成机制的论证而出现的激烈争论一直持续至今,这令人惊讶。人类不喜欢惊讶:“由意想不到的事情引发的情绪”。然而,科学史和人类智力发展史表明,在人类知识发展和文化演变过程中,惊讶和意外发现具有创造性的推动作用。如果我们的智力无法或不愿对意外之事做出反应,也无法在令人惊讶之事和平常之事之间建立联系,智人的生活就不会改变。18世纪和19世纪的欧洲旅行者对南美洲丰富多样的生物感到惊讶:其美丽和繁茂令人惊讶,同时其与欧洲和非洲生物的相似之处也令人惊讶。达尔文的好奇心追求并欢迎惊讶。