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2007-03-05 12:50:22 · 3 answers · asked by jamoncita 5 in Food & Drink Vegetarian & Vegan

3 answers

Of course, the most famous of all British naturalists also agreed with the other naturalists. I am referring to Charles Darwin (1800-1882) who at the age of 22 years started on a journey around the world which lasted 5 years. On this journey Darwin collected material which served to publish his most famous book in 1859: The Origin of Species by Natural Selection: Darwin was a member of the Royal Society of London and after his death he was buried in Westminster Abbey with great funeral honours and diplomatic representatives from many great nations were present at his funeral. Darwin wrote:
"The grading of forms, organic functions, customs and diets showed in an evident way that the normal food of man is vegetable like the anthropoids and apes and that our canine teeth are less developed than theirs and that we are not destined to compete with wild beasts or carnivorous animals."
In his book The Origin of Man he tells us:
"Although we know nothing for certain about the time or place that man shed the thick hair that covered him, with much probability of being right we could say that he must have lived in a warm country where conditions were favourable to the frugivorous way of life which, to judge from analogies, must have been the way man lived."

2007-03-05 12:59:46 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 4 0

Yes.

2007-03-05 21:28:42 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

yes he was (kind of ironic huh), along with many other celebrities and famous people. =)

2007-03-05 20:57:47 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

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