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  1. Natural selection and the ‘antiquity of man’: Intellectual impacts in the Australian colonies.Amy Way - 2021 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 90 (C):308-320.
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  • A good Darwinian? Winwood Reade and the making of a late Victorian evolutionary epic.Ian Hesketh - 2015 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 51:44-52.
    In 1871 the travel writer and anthropologist W. Winwood Reade (1838–1875) was inspired by his correspondence with Darwin to turn his narrow ethnological research on West African tribes into the broadest history imaginable, one that would show Darwin's great principle of natural selection at work throughout the evolutionary history of humanity, stretching back to the origins of the universe itself. But when Martyrdom of Man was published in 1872, Reade confessed that Darwin would not likely find him a very good (...)
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