Alfred Russel Wallace, the Victorian Outsider
Over at Evolution News and Science Today, an Intelligent Design site operated by the Discovery Institute, Alfred Russel Wallace is receiving a great deal of attention in his bicentennial year. Professor Michael A. Flannery has written a book and several articles about Wallace.
A spell back, I wrote about whether or not we would have evolutionary theory if Charles Darwin had never been born. Since evolution is ancient, it would have been assembled and popularized in a "scientific" format. Alfie almost did that, but Charlie got to the publisher first.
Alfred Russel Wallace, ca. 1865 |
Why is Alfred Russel Wallace today a comparatively little known figure next to Darwin? The literature is replete with examples — Darwin’s Moon, In Darwin’s Shadow, Darwin’s “neglected double,” Darwin’s “eclipse” of Wallace — all suggestive of a subordinate status in the annals of history. Michael Ruse has called him “a brilliant scientist” but “a crazy enthusiast for any silly idea floating by.” In comparing Darwin’s “single-minded devotion to his scientific cause,” Andrew Berry praised Wallace’s scientific accomplishments and brilliance but concluded that his “scattershot embrace of every needy underdog under the sun smacks of dilettantism.”
If you've a mind to, you can read the rest at "The Outsider: Alfred Russel Wallace’s Reputation in the Darwinian Era." (If you click on the Michael Flannery link, there are several other articles about Alfie.) You may also like my article, "Alfred Russel Wallace and Evolution."