'...succeeds admirably in presenting Darwin and his ideas to its intended audience. ' Michael T. Ghiselin, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews
'...a judiciously balanced book that offers a fine introduction to Darwin and contemporary philosophy of biology.' The Philosophers' Magazine
'a clear, well-written, fair, broad-ranging and student-friendly introduction to Darwinian thinking' - Kim Sterelny, Victoria University of Wellington and Australian National University
'Charles Darwin has been enlisted to support many different, and often contradictory, intellectual and political agendas. This is a clear and careful philosophical examination of which of these causes Darwin is willing and able to support. An excellent introduction to Darwin's intellectual orientation and the implications of his thought.' - Paul Griffiths, University of Queensland, Australia
'This book is a true gem. Although modestly billed as a philosophical introduction to Darwins thought, its actually far more. With engaging style, Lewens deftly interweaves intellectual history and state-of-the-art evolutionary theory to illuminate current debates over intelligent design, evolutionary psychology, evolutionary epistemology, ethics, sex differences, and the nature of science itself. Lively, timely, insightful, and informative, its a terrific read.' - David Buller, Northern Illinois University, USA
Charles Darwin remains as influential as ever. He is a hate figure of the religious right which only adds to his lustre in the eyes of everybody else. Tim Lewens brilliantly explores the extraordinary role that Darwin has played not only in science and philosophy but also right across the full range of human affairs. Lewens' book contradicts the belief that nothing more that is fresh and interesting could be added to all the existing writings about Darwin. - Sir Patrick Bateson, University of Cambridge, UK
'Tim Lewens brilliantly explores the extraordinary role that Darwin has played not only in science and philosophy but also right across the full range of human affairs. Lewens' book contradicts the belief that nothing more that is fresh and interesting could be added to all the existing writings about Darwin.Sir Patrick Bateson, University of Cambridge, UK