Dear Evoldir, Thanks to everyone (9 people) who forwarded their literature sources and insights on Non-Western history and perspectives of evolution. I have included their responses below andseveralmss.I found after reading their responses. Additionally, I received many more requests (16) from people who were interested in the topic but had yet to find literature dealing with the topic. Again, thank you foryour help. Now, I am quite excited about preparing and presenting this lecture. Have a wonderful day, Lesley Campbell. Department of Evolution, Ecology, and Organismal Biology Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, 43210 Literature found: 1. Christidou V, Hatzinikita V. 2006. Preschool Children's Explanations of Plant Growth and Rain Formation: A Comparative Analysis. Research in Science Education 36: 187-210. 2. Maziak, W. 2005. Science in the Arab World: Vision of Glories Beyond. Science 308: 1416-1418. 3. Lazcano, A. 2005. Teaching Evolution in Mexico: Preaching to the Choir. Science 310: 787-789. 4. Gusfield JR. 2003. Contentious curricula: Afrocentrism and creationism in American public schools. Contemporary sociology 32: 508-509. Suggestions received: Dr. Joseph L. Graves, Jr., Dean, University Studies & Professor of Biological Sciences, North Carolina A&T State University, 108A Hines Hall, 1601 E. Market St., Greensboro, NC 27411, email: gravesjl@ncat.edu; phone: (336)-285-2060; mobile: (336)-707-1556 I don't think you are going to find evidence of pre-20th century, evolutionary thinking as a whole outside of Western Europe. You may be able to focus your discussion on particular aspects of the Darwinian syllogism (such as variation, heredity, and struggle for existence) or the species concept. For example, Ernest Mayer in The Growth of Biological Thought , Harvard University Press 1982 discusses how his identification of bird species in Papua New Guinea differed from the native people by only one species. His explanation for his was that they were unaware of the interbreeding of two of their species, which differed slightly by habitat and morphology. You might be able to find information on how non-Western cultures viewed the idea of the species. I often use the Biblical references in Genesis, chapter 1:11 states: "seed bearing plants and trees on the land that bear fruit with seed in it, according to their varying kinds." Indigenous Western African notions of kinds are based in animism and speak more to spiritual entities as opposed to material beings (e.g. Mbiti, J., African Religions and Philosophy 2nd Ed., Heineman, 1969 & Hountondji, P.J., African Philosophy: Myth & Reality, Indiana University Press, 1983.) You might also find some interesting material by examining how different cultures developed their ideas on human variation. I discuss some of this in Graves, J.L., The Race Myth: Why We Pretend Race Exists in America, Dutton 2005. Also in a piece I wrote for Tapestry Press, I discuss Chinese folk notions of human ancestry, Graves, J.L., The meaning of race in the African American Experience, in Africana Legacy: Diasporic Studies in the Americas, 2006. I also just thought of some other books that can give you some direction in your quest. -Lindberg, C., The Beginnings of Western Science: The European Scientific Tradition in Philosophical, Religious, and Institutional Context, 600 BC to 1450, University of Chicago Press, 1992 -- has chapters on the origins of science, ancient Egyptians, and Islamic science. -Moore, J., Science as a Way of Knowing: The Foundations of Modern Biology, Harvard University Press, 1993 -- chapters on the antecedents of scientific thought, also Mesopotamia and Babylon. -Bucaille, M., The Bible, the Qur'an and Science: The Holy Scriptures Examined in the Light of Modern Science, 1981 -- originally published in Arabic, good comparison of Christian, Jewish, and Islamic views of history and science, contrasted to modern scientific views of same. Also, looking at your email address I am assuming your are at Ohio State. If my assumption is correct, you will need to give some thought to how you teach evolutionary ideas to African American students. By necessity this has been an interest of mine (as the first African American evolutionary biologist in US history.) One of the challenges you will confront is Afrocentrism. I have written some on this see: -Graves, J.L. (1993) Evolutionary biology and human variation: Biological determinism and the mythology of race. Race Relations Abstracts 18(3):4-34. Sage Publishers. William J. Etges wetges@uark.edu I think there is some good information in Coyne and Orr's (2004)Speciation on how non-scientists view species. There are referencesabout this as well. Mark Ragan FLS, m.ragan@imb.uq.edu.au, Professor and Head, Division of Genomics & Computational Biology, The Institute for Molecular Bioscience, Professor, School of Information Technology & Electrical Engineering, The University of Queensland. Although I'm not a professional historian of science, history of science (and before that, history of natural history) is a serious avocation of mine and I've spent some 20 years pursuing some ideas back into early history, including non-Western traditions. I believe I'm conversant with the standard history-of-science literature. In my opinion it's possible to trace threads of evolutionary thought back to the Middle East (what's now Egypt & Syria) around 2000-2500 years ago. However, the tradition in what's now the Islamic world is almost certainly derivative from Greece via what is now Turkey, and the tradition (such as it is) in China is even later. Japan is fully derivative from China. The Indian tradition was oral so links are unreliable, but in any case there is little to go on there. There are earlier stories to be told based on analogy (e.g. concepts of metempsychosis, totemism etc.), but I don't think they link to modern evolutionary ideas via any clear or continuous intellectual tradition. Michael A. Bell mabell@life.bio.sunysb.edu I don't agree that animal or plant domestication implies any comrehension of evolution. It only understanding that offspring resemble parents, and farmers could figure that out out.However, I have not replied just to be disagreeable. Last summer, I received an unpublished book that attacked creationism. It included a long list of creation stories from different cultures. I can't tell you the title of the book because it is lost somewhere in my office. However, there are lots of creation stories out there, and I think that will provide you a culturally diverse historical perspective. Doug Tarnopol tarnopol@cox.net I'm assuming you're teaching a biology class, not a history one, so I realize you need a historical intro.I think there are several issues here. First, if you go chronological, you risk the ol' Whiggish error -- all roads lead to, in this case, Darwin. I think that's, ironically, a very un-evolutionary way of looking at the history of evolution, which was as contingent a process as any other in history. Second, "non-Western" is another sticking point. What, exactly, is that? I get the sense that you're looking for non-Western precursors. I understand and admire the desire, but the category begs definition, beside the "precursoritis" of Whiggism. On the latter, does Democritus count as "Western"? Certainly, to (some of) us, but to him, he'd have had no idea what we were talking about. Most likely, his primary loyalty was to his city-state, and he certainly had no idea he'd end up in "Plato-to-NATO"- type lectures on the history of evolution! LOL. I emphasize this perhaps obvious point to encourage you not to present the history of evolution as an inevitable march of progress. (If you have no intention of doing so, my apologies! Just going on the basis of the e-mail...) Now, since the nineteenth century (definitely the twentieth), there's been a lot evolutionary work done in Russia, Japan, Brazil -- probably a ton of other places, too. Haldane set up a lab in India. And so forth. What counts as "Western" -- the origin of the idea or the people who work on and shape that idea?I think a thematic approach to views of nature would allow you to both cast a wider net, culturally speaking, and avoid "precursoritis." All cultures had their own ways of explaining the variety of species (whatever term they used -- "kinds") around them; each had its own way of categorizing (a key element) -- just look at the intro to Foucault's Order of Things (or first chapter...can't remember), in which he describes a Chinese categorization. (Btw, I'm not a Foucauldian or post-whatever-ist -- but this is still a good thing to read.) OK, for actual sources -- for China, of which I know next to nothing, I'd start with Needham's multivolume work. For India -- can't help ya, but I'm sure that if you cast this wider net, you'll find notions of how various subcontinental cultures viewed nature. Breaking it down by religious tradition would probably help. Africa -- completely ignorant, but again, I think you could find some decent information just from casting this wider net. And so on: Mesoamerican, etc. Anthropologists and religious texts will probably be your best bet, and you can probably find what you need for an intro lecture online or in the OSU library -- you don't need to delve deeply, of course!Finally, even on the Western tip -- try not to go Plato-to-NATO. Include practice, not just theory; put in something (if you can) about the expansion of natural history during the Renaissance (other worlds -- microscopic and "New"); and so on. If you have questions or want to bug me for actual sources (I got a pretty big library on this stuff here), feel free!Last comment: Assuming this is a biology course, I would take advantage of the historical survey lecture to step back a bit and talk about the nature of history and sciences that try to deal with the unrepeatable. Time is the subject here, ultimately, and that may be another touchstone for your multicultural approach: different cultures' concepts of time.I hope this was helpful! If you don't want to deal with a historian's quibbles, you can still go "Plato-to-NATO" with a multicultural twist by looking at other cultures' concepts of living nature and time, which shouldn't take long to ferret out. I've got a friend who's a historian of Chinese medicine/science in Tel Aviv who might be able to help with actual sources beyond Needham...but I think Needham is all you'll need for China.Bug me anytime -- I love this stuff, and don't get too much of a chance to go on and on about it.Also, if you do put together a nonlinear, multicultural lecture(s?) on evolution (writ large), I bet it's the kind of thing you could share. Most likely, someone else has done it, but I'm not too sure...could be very helpful for any intro course (bio or history or philosophy) on evolution... David Buckley dbuckley@berkeley.edu I found an interesting book some years ago. Here's the reference:- Mabud, S. A. (1991). The Theory of Evolution. An assessment from the islamic point of view. Publisher: The Islamic Academy, Cambridge, UK & The Islamic Academy of Science, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.The author was pointing out the impossibility to reconcile the Koran and the Evolutionary Thought. I know, however, that there has been a heating debate on this topic among Islamic scientists, but I haven't follow it closely enough..... Nick Barton, n.barton@ed.ac.uk I've also looked for non-Western histories of evolution, with almost no success. One paper (suggested by Satoshi Chiba) that might help is: Sakura, O. 1998. Similarities and Varieties: A Brief Sketch on the Reception of Darwinism and Sociobiology in Japan. Biology and Philosophy 13:341-357. Rodolfo Jaffé Ribbi rojaff@gmail.com The book "Guns, Germs and Steel" from Jared M. Diamond gives a nice insight on Pre-Darwinian history discussed from a non-Western perspective. Donald Roy Forsdyke forsdyke@post.queensu.caThe best account I know is Roberts' (1929) "Plant Hybridization before Mendel." campbell.633@osu.edu