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10 ways to celebrate today’s ‘Origin of Species’ birthday

By | November 24, 2009, 4:00 AM PST

There’s no such thing as too much Charles Darwin-celebrating. So after rejoicing in February for his 200th birthday, we celebrate today the 150th anniversary of the publication of On the Origin of Species. Whether you’re in Israel or Columbus, and whether you want to see a first edition of the book or have an endangered animal tattooed on your forearm, there’s something just for you. Thanks for Origin, Chas. Here’s to another 150 years.


1. Get some ink. If you are so totally committed to celebrating Darwin’s achievements that you want to spend the rest of your life with a not-so-subtle reminder, the Ultimate Holding Company is looking for volunteers to be tattooed with endangered species. ExtInked is an exhibition of drawings, illustrating 100 of the most endangered species in the British Isles. The exhibit, which runs until December 1, will close with the dramatic live tattooing of the drawings on 100 human ambassadors for the threatened birds, fish, amphibians, reptiles, mammals, plants and fungi. (Is there really someone volunteering to get a fungi tat?) Check out the site to see which organisms are already taken and which you could still volunteer to wear on your skin for eternity. Exhibitionist inking takes place November 26 through November 29, in Salford, England.

2. Join a free webcast. Two lectures today, brought to us by the Darwin 150 Project Lecture Series. First at 1 p.m. EST is Frontiers of Evolution, from Professor E.O. Wilson, Everett Mendelsohn and others, at Harvard. Then at 6 p.m. EST is Celebrating 150 Years of ‘Origin of Species,’ with Gerald Edelman, Paul Ekman and Terrence Deacon, at the New York Academy of Sciences.

3. Join a discussion about the value of the book. Is Origin the greatest book ever written? Join a discussion today at London’s Natural History Museum of this very topic. The book has been called blasphemous, revolutionary and world-changing. But is it the greatest? After the event, attendees will be able to see some of the first editions of the book held in the museum’s library.

4. Surround yourself with Darwin experts in Israel. From Darwin to Evo-Devo: A Symposium in honor of the 150th anniversary of Darwin’s The Origin of Species will conclude today at the Technion–Israel Institute of Technology. On the agenda are speakers from Technion, Harvard, Universidad Catolica del Ecuador, Universitat Cologne, Hebrew University of Jerusalem and University of Basel.

5. Celebrate in style, eh. It’s the final day of Origin of Species at 150: A Celebratory Conference at the University of Toronto, which means it’s time tonight for the gala celebratory dinner: A Toast To Charles Darwin at the Colony Grande Ballroom in Toronto. $60.

6. Bring religion into the mix. Tonight, at London’s Rochester Cathedral, University of London professor Michael Reiss lectures about Darwin, Evolution and God’s Action in the World.

7. Tour Chuck’s birthplace. Charles Darwin was born at The Mount, in Shrewsbury. If you’re not in Britain, take a virtual tour of the place where Darwin lived during his school and college days, and the place to which he returned after his famous Beagle voyage.

8. Become a friend. The Darwin 150 Project, a public science education initiative focused on this 150th birthday, aims to bring the important insights of Darwin and science in general to the mainstream. What better way to do this than through Facebook? The nonprofit initiative already has a quarter-million fans, and the goal is to bring that number up to one million today, the birthday. Click here to join.

9. Get three-for-one in Amherst. Three Amherst College venues celebrate the birthday with new exhibits. The Museum of Natural History will feature an exhibit called Simple and Grand, with several copies of the book, bones of modern and fossil animals and a 19th century microscope. The Frost Library and The Mead Art Museum have concurrent exhibits. All are free and open to the public.

10. Listen to a Darwin scholar in Ohio. Charles Darwin: The Concise Story of an Extraordinary Man, December 3, hosted by the Columbus Zoo and Aquarium in conjunction with The Ohio State University, Darwin: The Growth of an Idea. Darwin scholar Dr. Tim Berra will lecture at Ohio State and sign copies of his book, Charles Darwin: The Concise Story of an Extraordinary Man.

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Melanie D.G. Kaplan

About Melanie D.G. Kaplan

Melanie D.G. Kaplan is a contributing writer for SmartPlanet.

Melanie D.G. Kaplan

Melanie D.G. Kaplan

Contributing Writer

Melanie D.G. Kaplan is a regular contributor to The Washington Post and WebMD and has written for The New York Times, National Geographic Traveler and People. She holds degrees from Syracuse University and Columbia University's Graduate School of Journalism. She is based in Washington, D.C.

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Melanie D.G. Kaplan

Melanie D.G. Kaplan

In addition to working as a journalist, Melanie keeps the dog food fund flush with occasional consulting jobs. In the unusual event that her writing mentions a company or organization for which she has provided editorial services, she will disclose that fact. She will do the same should she cover any companies in which she holds investments.

She writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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RE: 10 ways to celebrate today's 'Origin of Species' birthday
Strange that religion is coming around to embrace Darwin, at least
in some circles. Too bad other groups are hundreds of years
behind in still thinking people could not have evolved from
chimps, let alone mice and fish. Celebrate today, for Darwin has
led us so far into research.
jp
Posted by JonBevm
24th Nov 2009
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The only way to celebrate origins
Origins strongly supports a religion - athiesm{1}. Why should athiesm be given preferential treatment over religions that believe in the afterlife?

Seems to me that supporting Origins is supporting a belief that there is only oblivion after death. What good is it to dream of the infinite but to only exist for an instant! If that is the case, then every time a human being is conceived, the parents are guilty of murder.

The only way to celebrate Origins is to celebrate its debunking as a failed and scientifically unsupportable, failed theory.



Footnotes

{1} If athiesm is not a religion, then athiests have no 1964 Civil Rights Act rights to violate if they are fired just for being athiests. Try firing an athiest for that reason and see how fast the lawsuits fly!
Posted by LarryPTL
24th Nov 2009
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RE: 10 ways to celebrate today's 'Origin of Species' birthday
The cult of Darwinism is dead. It has been debunked!
Anyone who objectively looks at the observable evidence can see the theory has no legs. wink
Anyone who would adhere to it is a fool; most likely supporting it to get funding or appease their conscience.
You could all celebrate by joining the Flat Earth Society.
Peace.
JP
Posted by wwwfreak
24th Nov 2009
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RE: 10 ways to celebrate today's 'Origin of Species' birthday
Darwin himself admitted when looking at the complexities of the eye and its intricate interwoven interactions with the nervous system, that his theory was very sketchy.

IF anyone can figure out how complex systems like the blood flow and respiratory system, together with the nervous system all just happened to evolve so that their symbiotic relationship just happened to produce what we see today in biology, then I will give it my full focus.

Until then, the only acceptable solution is that there is a master designer behind all we see.

How can any semi-educated person believe any of this drivel that Darwin out out there? IT is a theory, yet we celebrate it? How pathetic!

Before Copernicus debunked the modern thinking of the day, everyone believed in the theory of a flat earth, too!
Posted by ferenc@...
24th Nov 2009
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RE: 10 ways to celebrate today's 'Origin of Species' birthday
Read the blog in the article "Believing in Darwin", Britannica

http://www.britannica.com/blogs/2009/02/believing-in-darwin/

Evolution cannot explain any of the complexities we see around us,
especially not by "beneficial mutations" of which we would require quadrillions.
Posted by fjlmiad
24th Nov 2009
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RE: 10 ways to celebrate today's 'Origin of Species' birthday
The Theory of Natural Selection doesn't say anything about god or religion. It's just a way of explaining the incredible complexity of life through a few simple natural tendancies. And the fact is, the book was debunked for several decades after it was published, as there were tons of holes and flaws which Darwin freely admitted to. But then over time, as more data was found, it increasingly turned out to fit better and better in with the framework of Darwin's theory.
Scientists don't call it a theory because it's a guess, they call it a theory because using it they've made a lot of predictions that have proven correct. At worst, it's probably about as wrong as Newton's Laws of Motion.
Posted by brendan@...
24th Nov 2009
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Not a theory, evolution is a fact
The world is flat they said, and scientists proved them wrong.
The Earth is the center of the universe, scientists proved them wrong and even the Pope apologized.
Time is fixed, and Einstein proved it is variable.
And 150 years ago Darwin proved evolution was a fact, that has been substantiated over and over and over. No matter how many times people disagree, they can only disagree with their "beliefs" not with any facts.
JP the first.
Posted by JonBevm
24th Nov 2009
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RE: 10 ways to celebrate today's 'Origin of Species' birthday
Who said there is no God? Of course there is, we just got his name wrong. Let's all bow before the almighty Charles Darwin!
Posted by bjswm@...
24th Nov 2009
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RE: 10 ways to celebrate today's 'Origin of Species' birthday
It is truly incredible that the same argument continues to be used to try to "debunk" knowledge. The same name calling continues, the same miss use of terms. But, now I see where the use of "Flat Earth" is used to support ID or Creationism if you will, by assigning this out dated idea to those who use science to understand the physical world that we exist in. The same movement is trying to take us back to a time and set of ideas that never existed, that the United States was founded as a Christian Utopia.

The problem with this attempted refutiation is that it makes people dumb...it dumbs down education. It gives the idea that there is no use in trying to figure out how things happen what happens...cause and effect. I ask that all access information available on line. (Everyone that reads this has access, it is whether you are afraid or not...don't be afraid...this information will not hurt you...but not knowing it will hurt you.) Go to PBS.ORG, check out Judgement Day Intelligent Design on Trial. This is a two hour NOVA production that exposes the ID Movement and its ramifications. Again... don't be Afraid.

If there was no knowledge of Evolution how would we be dealing with the H1N1 Flu???
Posted by Marty Jansing
24th Nov 2009
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RE: 10 ways to celebrate today's 'Origin of Species' birthday
For 150 years people have been trying to prove Darwin's theories and for 150 years all we have to show for it are hoaxes, broad assumptions and the degradation of science. What is there to celebrate?
Posted by pj_mouse
24th Nov 2009
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RE: 10 ways to celebrate today's 'Origin of Species' birthday
"And 150 years ago Darwin proved evolution was a fact, that has been substantiated over and over and over"

Nope, sorry, only mathematical theories can be proved.

Everything else can only be either disproved or repeatedly tested (until finally accepted as true because nobody has been able to disprove the theory). Maybe evolution falls into the latter group of theories, maybe it doesn't. Either way, it is not possible to "prove" evolution.

Or to put it another way, everyone knows that all swans are white.

VoxSapiens.com
Posted by VoxSapiens.com
25th Nov 2009
0 Votes
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Did it ever occur to the non-believers ....
that Evolution is how the Great Spirit created all of the life aorund them. Darwin's theory does not preculde a diety. It says nothing about the existence or non-existence of a diety.

If natural forces are responsible for "Natural Selection", then who is responsible for those natural forces?

So maybe those fundies who believe what a bunch of ignoramuses wrote several thousand years ago should look at evolution as an "act of God's creation".
Posted by mheartwood
25th Nov 2009
0 Votes
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RE: 10 ways to celebrate today's 'Origin of Species' birthday
The rational man looks to things he can believe in by hearing, feeling, smelling, seeing and tasting and calls it fact. For all else he makes up beliefs that 'work' and collects followers, the same way that sheep are led to slaughter. The Majority or the Most 'forceful' rule. The so-called 'bible' is written from dozens of sources, if not more, of languages over centuries and transcribed by hundreds of scribes and scholars. WHAT DOES NOT FIT THE STORY is in the Vatican under lock and key to keep the public UNKNOWLEDGEABLE to the truth. It's just a STORY.
Posted by allan55casey@...
26th Nov 2009
0 Votes
+ -
RE: 10 ways to celebrate today's 'Origin of Species' birthday
The rational man looks to things he can believe in by hearing, feeling, smelling, seeing and tasting and calls it fact. For all else he makes up beliefs that 'work' and collects followers, the same way that sheep are led to slaughter. The Majority or the Most 'forceful' rule. So-called 'science' is written from dozens of sources, if not more, of languages over centuries and transcribed by hundreds of scribes and scholars. WHAT DOES NOT FIT THE STORY is hidden away to keep the public UNKNOWLEDGEABLE to the truth. It's just a STORY.
Posted by bjswm@...
26th Nov 2009
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