|  |  | c. 1735: Linnaeus(Rise of Evolution) (Reconciliation)
 Linnaeus's Systema Naturae charts life. Swedish botanist 
	Carl von Linne, writing under the Latin name Linnaeus, attempts to classify all life 
	on Earth. He publishes the first edition of Systema Naturae while in his late 
	twenties, and continues refining the details throughout his life. His system divides 
	life into kingdoms, classes, orders, genera, and species. It is a landmark in science 
	that will greatly influence future naturalists, including Charles Darwin. It also is 
	an act of religious devotion. Unlike Darwin's "tree of life," Linnaeus's system does 
	not imply that different species are related through evolution. Each species is a 
	distinct "archetype" and a reflection of God's intent. c. 1749: Comte de Buffon
 (Rise of Evolution)
 Comte de Buffon proposes radical ideas. Georges Louis Leclerc, 
	Comte de Buffon is one of the most respected naturalists of his era. Yet, in his 
	Natural History, he makes a speculation that raises eyebrows; he writes 
	that living creatures evolve according to natural laws. Buffon even dares suggest 
	that humans and apes are related, and that all life has descended from a single 
	ancestor. His heretical ideas are later recanted under pressure: "I abandon 
	everything in my book ... contrary to the narrative of Moses." 1794: Zoonomia
 (Rise of Evolution)
 Erasmus Darwin's Zoonomia heralds evolution. Charles 
	Darwin's grandfather, a flamboyant physician, botanist, and poet, may be the 
	first figure in history to merit the title "evolutionist." In Zoonomia, 
	written almost entirely in rhymed couplets, he asks, "Would it be too bold to 
	imagine ... that all warm-blooded animals have arisen from one-living fillament?" 
	Unlike his grandson Charles, though, Erasmus Darwin never works out a coherent 
	and convincing theory for how evolution works. Evolution (then called 
	"transmutation") is not widely accepted by British intellectuals in the late 
	18th century, but it is widely discussed. -> Go to 1800 |  |  |  |  |