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Evolution is a 2001 documentary series by the American broadcaster Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) and WGBH on evolutionary biology, from the producers of NOVA.
The spokespeople for the series were Jane Goodall (overall spokesperson), Kenneth R. Miller and Stephen Jay Gould (science spokespeople), Eugenie C. Scott (education spokesperson), Arthur Peacocke and Arnold Thomas (religious spokespeople). The series was narrated by the Irish actor Liam Neeson.
The series was accompanied by a book by the popular science writer Carl Zimmer Evolution: The Triumph of an Idea.[1] An extensive website provides teaching resources for each episode's material, including "The Mating Game", further looks at Charles Darwin, and an interactive history of speciation in the invented "pollencreeper" birds.
The episode "What about God?" features discussion of the issues of evolution and creationism at Wheaton College, an Evangelical Protestant college that teaches evolution but has in the past restricted professors from taking a stance on the literal versus the allegorical interpretations of Adam and Eve in the Genesis account of creation.
Actor | Character |
---|---|
Roger Brierley | Charles Lyell |
Anthony Carrick | Samuel Wilberforce |
Jane Cunliffe | Emma Darwin |
Manon Eames | Jessie Brodie |
Will Fawcett | John Gould |
Cornelius Garrett | Gentleman #2 |
Andrew Heath | Gentleman #1 |
Andy Henderson | Thomas Huxley |
Chris Larkin | Charles Darwin |
Joshua Losey | Gamekeeper |
Eleanor Ogbourne | Annie Darwin |
John Quentin | Oxford Don |
Matthew Radford | Richard Owen |
Ian Shaw | Robert FitzRoy |
Mark Tandy | Erasmus Alvey Darwin |
Tobias Vaughan | William Erasmus Darwin |
John Walters | James Manby Gully |
TV critic Julie Salamon, writing in The New York Times, said that "[a] powerful sense of drama, discovery and intellectual enthusiasm runs through this rich eight-hour series ... The series covers an enormous amount of ground but doesn't leave you feeling swamped."[3]
Being made and broadcast in the country where creation–evolution controversy is strongest, the last episode What About God? focused on religion, and "through personal stories of students and teachers, it offers the view that they are compatible". Phina Borgeson, Faith Network Director of the National Center for Science Education, provided a Congregational Study Guide for Evolution.[4] Conversely, the Discovery Institute's Center for the Renewal of Science and Culture produced a website to refute the documentary and started a petition it called A Scientific Dissent From Darwinism to show that there were "scientists that dispute the claims".[5]
The series can provide some excellent models for how science progresses.