To: VadeRetro
Darwin says, "though I thank you for the honor," when under his breath he was probably muttering, "lest I be shot." At any rate, these words indicate Darwin wanted to distance himself from the author. But why would Marx want to dedicate a book, or volume, to Darwin? I happen to think Darwin did not really write what was on his mind, but measured his words so as to avoid a confrontation. Shall we put him on a stand and make him take an oath?
To: Fester Chugabrew
"But why would Marx want to dedicate a book, or volume, to Darwin? "
He didn't. The story is bogus. It was a different book, by Marx's son-in-law, that Darwin was asked permission to have dedicated to him. The name of the book was *The Student Darwin*. Marx NEVER asked Darwin for permission to dedicated anything to him. Darwin refused to be associated with *The Student Darwin* because it advocated atheism, and he wasn't an atheist.
1,712 posted on
12/21/2005 5:19:20 AM PST by
CarolinaGuitarman
("There is a grandeur in this view of life...")
To: Fester Chugabrew
At any rate, these words indicate Darwin wanted to distance himself from the author. Who seems not to have been Marx. At any rate, you apparently want a refusal to make implied endorsements of unread works to sound somehow sinister. That's very unreasonable. It's little more than refusing to give others a blank check on your credibility account.
But why would Marx want to dedicate a book, or volume, to Darwin?
How Marx reasoned things is irrelevant to the diversity of life on Earth.
1,761 posted on
12/21/2005 8:14:35 AM PST by
VadeRetro
(Liberalism is a cancer on society. Creationism is a cancer on conservatism.)
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