Around the time that Darwin was studying evolution, there was another English naturalist named Alfred Russel Wallace, who was busy unlocking the secrets of natural selection in the Malay Archipelago. Wallace often corresponded with Darwin and sent him a paper on his theories. It stated that organisms best adapted to their surroundings will survive and procreate, passing along their traits to the next generation in other words, natural selection. Darwin had also been thinking along these lines, but he was nowhere near completing his work on the subject. So, prompted by the threat of Wallaces discovery, Darwin quickly condensed and rearranged his works into On the Origin of Species, the book that would secure his place as evolutionary biologys forerunner.
All this isnt to say Darwin doesnt deserve his due; even the most diehard skeptic knows this. It just means that, when youre cutting the cake for Darwin this Saturday at 10 a.m. at Fern Forest (201 S. Lyons Rd., Coconut Creek), you should also remember Wallace. If not for the reasons above, then solely because its a well-known fact (ahem, common perception) that all scientists are instinctively drawn to cake. Visit www.darwindaybroward.com for more information.
Sat., Feb. 9, 10 a.m., 2008