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Darwin and Gender project launched by Cambridge University.


Byline: ANI

London, July 15 (ANI): A groundbreaking new study, supported by The Bonita Bonita (Spanish and Portuguese for "beautiful") is the name of:
  • Bonita Magazine, an international men's magazine
  • Bonita, California
  • Bonita, Louisiana
 Trust, that will look at Charles Darwin's impact on attitudes to gender and sexuality, has been announced by Cambridge University Cambridge University, at Cambridge, England, one of the oldest English-language universities in the world. Originating in the early 12th cent. (legend places its origin even earlier than that of Oxford Univ. .

The Darwin and Gender project - funded by a A[pounds sterling]480,000 donation from The Bonita Trust - will make available for the first time in a single resource Darwin's private and largely unpublished writings relevant to all aspects of gender; in particular, a large body of the great naturalist's own letters.

The research for the three-year project will be overseen by the Darwin Correspondence Project at Cambridge University Library The Cambridge University Library is the centrally-administered library of the University of Cambridge in England. It comprises five separate libraries:
  • the University Library main building
  • the Medical Library
.

It is anticipated that the project will illuminate such private relationships as that of Darwin with his elder surviving daughter, Henrietta. Too young to be much involved in the writing of On the Origin of Species, she is likely to emerge as of hitherto unsuspected importance in the writing of The Descent of Man, Darwin's first public statement on human evolution.

Darwin had a surprisingly large number of other female correspondents throughout his life (some 148). Many of them, such as Mary Boole (pictured), were practising scientists in their own right.

Behind the scenes he was unexpectedly encouraging of their work. Boole, a teacher, was the widow of George Boole (person) George Boole - 1815-11-02 - 2007-10-24 12:44 best known for his contribution to symbolic logic (Boolean Algebra) but also active in other fields such as probability theory, algebra, analysis, and differential equations. He lived, taught, and is buried in Cork City, Ireland.  who gave his name to Boolean logic The "mathematics of logic," developed by English mathematician George Boole in the mid-19th century. Its rules govern logical functions (true/false) and are the foundation of all electronic circuits in the computer. , but was also a gifted mathematician in her own right. Another correspondent, Lydia Becker
This article is on the scientist and human rights leader. For the Elysian Charter School prinicpal, see Lydia Becker


Lydia Ernestine Becker
, was a leading campaigner for women's right to vote. Darwin encouraged her botanical observations and sent her a copy of one of his papers to read at a ladies' 'literary' - in reality scientific - society meeting.

A letter from TH Farrer in October 1870, recently researched by the Correspondence Project, is revealing about attitudes to the contribution of women to intellectual life at the time: "One grudges the infinite number infinite number

a number so large as to be uncountable. Represented by 8, frequently obtained by 'dividing' by zero.
 of small things to be done, and feels sympathy with women's lot in life. Surely the fact they have all the little daily things to do is enough to account for their not succeeding in work requiring devotion and abstraction."

Farrer, who was recently widowed and caring for a family of small children, wrote to Darwin sharing botanical information.

Among the specific areas that Darwin and Gender will address are Darwin's domestic life, gender in a scientific context and gender and society. Researchers funded over three years by The Bonita Trust will provide accurate transcripts of the letters and research and write contextual material to make them accessible to both scholars and the general public.

Project director Professor Jim Secord said: "These are extraordinary letters that deserve a wide audience. Differences between the sexes played a key role in Darwin's thinking, which in turn had a major impact on Victorian society."

Ruth Parasol Ruth Parasol (born 1967) is a self-made billionaire, and co-founder of PartyGaming with her husband Russ DeLeon. In 2006, Parasol was ranked #197 on Forbes' 400 Richest Americans.  DeLeon, founding member of The Bonita Trust International Advisory Board said: "Many of the issues raised by Darwin in his correspondence have great relevance to modern society. The Darwin and Gender project will allow a wider audience an insight into how his views on gender shaped Victorian society. The encouragement of women in the fields of science Fields of science are widely-recognized categories of specialized expertise within science, and typically embody their own terminology and nomenclature.

Natural sciences

Main article: Natural science
 and technology is one of Bonita's core activities around the world, and Bonita is delighted to support the important research to be undertaken by Cambridge University."

Darwin, although he believed that women were best suited to domestic life and the care of children, went out of his way to encourage the scientific interests of women who wrote to him.

An example of Darwin's support for early women scientists can be found in a letter to Mary Treat, an American botanist and entomologist. She had been chastised chas·tise  
tr.v. chas·tised, chas·tis·ing, chas·tis·es
1. To punish, as by beating. See Synonyms at punish.

2. To criticize severely; rebuke.

3. Archaic To purify.
 by her mentor, Charles Riley, for jumping to conclusions on larval larval

1. pertaining to larvae.

2. larvate.


larval migrans
see cutaneous and visceral larva migrans.
 nutrition and sex determination in adult butterflies. However, Darwin writing in a positive tone, complimented Treat and encouraged her work.

He said: "Your observations and experiments on the sexes of butterflies are by far the best, as far as known to me, which have ever been made. They seem to me so important, that I earnestly hope you will repeat them and record the exact number of the larvae Larvae, in Roman religion
Larvae: see lemures.
 which you tempt to continue feeding and deprive of food, and record the sexes of the mature insects. Assuredly you ought then to publish the result in some well-known scientific journal." [letter to Mary Treat, 5 January 1872].

Treat followed Darwin's advice and repeated her experiments and published in the American Naturalist.

The Darwin and Gender project also includes an educational element to its work. Funding from The Bonita Trust will provide for an education officer to work in partnership with schools to bring the material to as wide an audience as possible. (ANI)

Copyright 2009 Asian News International The Asian News International (ANI) agency provides multimedia news to China and 50 bureaus in India. It covers virtually all of South Asia since its foundation and presently claims, on its official website, to be the leading South Asia-wide news agency.  (ANI) - All Rights Reserved.

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Publication:Asian News International
Date:Jul 15, 2009
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