The studies in this second volume by Martin Rudwick (the first being The
New Science of Geology: Studies in the Earth Science in the Age of
Reform) focus on the figures of Charles Lyell and Charles Darwin. Lyell
rose to be of pivotal importance in the second quarter of the 19th
century because he challenged other geologists throughout Europe by
probing their methods and conclusions to the limit. While adopting their
goal of reconstructing the contingent history of the earth, he claimed
that the physical processes observable in action in the present could
explain far more about the past than was commonly believed, and that it
was unnecessary to postulate occasional catastrophic events of still
greater intensity. Far more controversial was Lyell's further claim that
the earth and its life had always been in a stable steady state, rather
than developing in a broadly linear or directional fashion. His younger
friend Charles Darwin first made his name as a Lyellian geologist;
Darwin's early work in geology, studied here, provided important
foundations for his later and more famous research on speciation and
other biological problems.