Evolutionary thought has roots in antiquity, in the ideas of the ancient Greeks, Romans, and Chinese. Charles Darwin based his theory on the idea of natural selection. Mendelian genetics, a series of 19th-century experiments with pea plant variations rediscovered in 1900, was integrated with natural selection by Ronald Fisher, J. B. Haldane, and Sewall Wright.
About History of evolutionary thought in brief

It would have been like the first plants were disjointed parts of the ones we see today, and some survived by joining in combinations and then turning out as they did into plants like plants and animals. It could also be argued that what we call birth and. death in animals are just mingling and separations of elements, which are just the cause of the countless tribes of mortal things which cause the separation of things and things to happen. The modern synthesis of evolutionary biology and other biological fields has led to a widely applicable theory that encompassed much of biology—the modern synthesis. It has also led to sophisticated mathematical and causal models of evolution, such as those developed in the 1950s and 1960s by the researchers at the University of California, Los Angeles, and at the Scripps Institute of Technology. It also has had a profound impact on society, including in the fields of medicine, politics, law, and economics. It’s also had an impact on the way we think about the nature of the world, and how we perceive our own species and our place in the universe, and on the role of humans in the history of the universe. It can be traced back to the first pre-Socratic Greek philosophers, who believed that one type of animals, even humans, could descend from other types of animals. The idea of evolution was first proposed by Charles Darwin in 1858.
You want to know more about History of evolutionary thought?
This page is based on the article History of evolutionary thought published in Wikipedia (as of Nov. 05, 2020) and was automatically summarized using artificial intelligence.






