TrackSectionLength
01
00 - A Historical Sketch and Introduction44:41
02
01 - Chapter 1 Part 1 - Variation Under Domestication57:04
03
02 - Chapter 1 Part 2 - Variation Under Domestication (continued)35:10
04
03 - Chapter 2 - Variation Under Nature52:18
05
04 - Chapter 3 - Struggle For Existence45:55
06
05 - Chapter 4 Part 1 - Natural Selection or The Survival of the Fittest1:02:30
07
06 - Chapter 4 Part 2 - Natural Selection. (continued)1:01:25
08
07 - Chapter 4 Part 3 - Natural Selection. (conclusion)28:20
0908 - Chapter 5 Part 1 - Laws of Variation1:04:21
10
09 - Chapter 5 Part 2 - Laws Of Variation. (continued)26:23
1110 - Chapter 6 Part 1 - Difficulties of the Theory1:11:04
1211 - Chapter 6 Part 2 - Difficulties of the Theory (continued)45:26
1312 - Chapter 7 Part 1 - Miscellaneous Objections to the Theory of Natural Selection1:10:24
1413 - Chapter 7 Part 2 - Miscellaneous Objections (continued)55:03
1514 - Chapter 8 Part 1 - Instinct1:02:23
1615 - Chapter 8 Part 2 - Instinct (continued)24:24
1716 - Chapter 9 Part 1 - Hybridism56:11
1817 - Chapter 9 Part 2 - Hybridism (continued)37:17
1918 - Chapter 10 Part 1 - On the Imperfection of the Geological Record1:00:02
2019 - Chapter 10 Part 2 - On The Imperfection of the Geological Record (continued)25:45
2120 - Chapter 11 Part 1 - On the Geological Succession of Organic Beings1:08:34
2221 - Chapter 11 Part 2 - On the Geological Succession (continued)16:04
2322 - Chapter 12 Part 1 - Geological Distribution59:46
2423 - Chapter 12 Part 2 - Geological Distribution (continued)21:23
2524 - Chapter 13 - Geological Distribution Continued1:04:14
2625 - Chapter 14 Part 1 - Mutual Affinities of Organic Beings59:26
2726 - Chapter 14 Part 2 - Mutual Affinities of Organic Beings (continued)1:08:12
2827 - Chapter 15 Part 1 - Recapitulation and Conclusion56:25
2928 - Chapter 15 Part 2 - Recapitulation and Conclusion (continued)23:43

Notes
Running time: 23 hours and 44 minutes
Read by: Michael Armenta
Book Coordinator: Michael Armenta
Meta Coordinator: Availle
Proof Reader: KHand

Artwork
Cover:  Historical reconstruction of the Lower Pennsylvanian biota of coal swamps of North America. From Air-Breathers of the Coal Period: A Descriptive Account of the Remains of Land Animals Found in the Coal Formation of Nova Scotia with Remarks on their Bearing on Theories of the Formation of Coal and of the Origin of Species. Dawson Brothers, Montreal, 81 p
Inset: The HMS Beagle
Inset: Charles Darwin,1868, from Colin Ford's Julia Margaret Cameron: 19th Century Photographer of Genius.

Recordings
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The Origin of Species (1859) by Charles Darwin laid the foundation for the science of evolutionary biology that revolutionized our understanding of nature and mankind’s place within it. Published in 1859, the original title was On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life and was abbreviated for the sixth edition in 1872. The central premise is that the diversity of life results from a branching pattern of evolution from a common source and that populations change over the generations to adapt to changing circumstances through natural selection.  Various notions of “transmutation” had been proposed prior to publication and were considered controversial, as they stood in opposition to the long held belief that the diversity of life was the product of an unchanging design and that humans were distinct from all other species.  Darwin was an established scientist, and the work, which was written for the general reader, included exhaustive documentation from decades of research and analyzed the theory from philosophical and religious perspectives as well as scientific. As such, it was taken seriously, gained widespread interest, and helped the campaign to secularize science.  During the late nineteenth century the notion of evolution became generally accepted, but it wasn’t until the mid twentieth century that the significance of natural selection was fully understood as biologists and statisticians combined Darwin’s work with Mendel’s genetic theories to arrive at the modern evolutionary synthesis.  This central notion is now the unifying concept of the life sciences.


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Item Info
EAN - DVD case 0683422134814
EAN - CD jacket 0686175924305
Media MP3 CD
Package DVD box
Author Charles Darwin (1809 - 1882)
Year 1859
Recording
Read by Michael Armenta
Length 23 hours and 44 minutes
Type of Reading Solo

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On the Origin of Species

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