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There is nothing, however, in “the present state of things” that offers any hint at the origin of this fuller measure of man, and so Whewell suggests the geologist may close his own volume and “open one which has man’s moral and religious nature for its subject.”69 Darwin takes up Whewell’s challenge by seeking an account of man’s moral nature anchored in science and the present state of things.
Buckets from an English Sea: 1832 and the Making of Charles Darwin
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