Capitalist Contexts for Darwinian Theory: Land, Finance,
Industry and Empire |
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Authors: | M J S Hodge |
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Institution: | (1) Division of the History and Philosophy of Science, Department of Philosophy, University of Leeds, Leeds, LS2 9JT, UK |
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Abstract: | When socio-economic contexts are sought for Darwin’s science, it is customary to turn to the Industrial Revolution. However,
important issues about the long run of England’s capitalisms can only be recognised by taking a wider view than Industrial
Revolution historiographies tend to engage. The role of land and finance capitalisms in the development of the empire is one
such issue. If we historians of Darwin’s science allow ourselves a distinction between land and finance capitalisms on the
one hand and industrial capitalism on the other; and if we ask with which side of this divide were Darwin and his theory of
branching descent by natural selection aligned, then reflection on leading features of that theory, including its Malthusian
elements, suggests that the answer is often and largely, though not exclusively: on the land side. The case of Wallace, socialist
opponent of land capitalism, may not be as anomalous for this suggestion as one might at first think. Social and economic
historians have reached no settled consensuses on the long-run of England’s capitalisms. We historians of Darwin’s science
would do well to import some of these unsettled states of discussion into our own work over the years to come. |
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Keywords: | Darwin Wallace Malthus natural selection capitalism land finance empire industry industrial revolution class political economy population |
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