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Rob: Hello and welcome to 6 Minute English. I'm Rob.
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Neil: and I'm Neil. Hello.
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Rob: Hello, Neil! Today we're talking about evolution.
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Now the man most people think of when talking about evolution is of course Charles Darwin.
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He was a bit of a genius, wasn't he?
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Neil: He was. Evolution means the way living things change and develop over millions of years.
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And a genius has great and unusual skills or abilities in a particular subject or area.
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Well Charles Darwin was a clever man
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but I happen to know that another man actually came up with the same idea, but many years before he did!
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Rob: So how do you know that then, clever clogs
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that's someone who thinks they know everything? What was his name?
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Neil: Well, his name was Patrick Matthew.
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Rob: OK, well we're going to learn more about him on today's programme.
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But first can you answer this, Neil? What was Patrick Matthew's job? Was he ... a) a politician?
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b) a church minister? Or c) a horticulturalist?
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Neil: Well, I don't know so I'll go for the most profession that sounds most interesting
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...a horticulturalist, so I'll choose that one!
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That's a person who studies plants.
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Rob: OK. We'll find out later whether you are right or wrong.
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But let's listen now to Dr Mike Weale talking about Patrick Matthew.
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Can you hear the word he uses to mean 'change-making'?
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Dr Mike Weale: He published a brief outline of the idea of species being able to change
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into other species through natural selection
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this great, transformative idea that unites us all in a single tree of life.
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And he did that 27 years before Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace did so.
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And they recognized that he did so
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but other people since then have simplified the story and tended to concentrate just on Darwin.
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Neil: So, Matthew believed that evolution happened by natural selection.
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And natural selection describes the way that plants
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and animals adapt to their environment,
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because some individuals survive and reproduce, and others don't.
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Rob: And adapt means the way our bodies or our behaviour change to suit new conditions.
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Neil: And what does Mike mean by "a single tree of life"?
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Rob: Well, the basic idea behind evolution is that
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all the different species or types of living thing have evolved from the same simple life form.
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Just like a family tree describes how the members of your family are related to each other,
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so the "tree of life" describes how all living things are related.
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Neil: So if this was a transformative or change-making idea,
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why don't more of us know about Patrick Matthew?
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Rob: A good question, Neil. We heard in the clip that
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Darwin acknowledged or accepted - Matthew's claim to the idea.
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But it seems to be down to us the general public wanting to simplify things.
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Neil: Well, I like to keep things simple, Rob.
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Rob: You don't have to tell me that, Neil.
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But let's hear more on why Matthew might have been passed over or ignored by some.
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Here's Dr Patricia Fara, senior tutor at Clare College Cambridge.
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She tells us why Darwin was so successful.
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And listen out for the word she uses to mean close friends and supporters.
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Dr Patricia Fara: He brought his allies on board.
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And although he was publishing from his stronghold down in Kent he had the most
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famous, most prominent, eminent members of the scientific society
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in Victorian times who were pushing on his behalf.
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Having a scientific theory being accepted is not just a matter of whether the theory's right.
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Rob: The word she used was allies.
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What are they Neil?
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Neil: Allies are people who help or support us in something
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having someone on board also means to have someone's support for an idea or project.
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And Darwin's allies weren't just mates from down the pub, were they?
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Rob: No, they weren't! They were famous, prominent and eminent scientists.
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Prominent means important and well-known
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and eminent means important and respected.
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Neil: Ah yes! So you could say that I'm an eminent radio presenter, Rob?
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Rob: Well, I could Neil, but ...
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Neil: OK, OK, OK moving on! These eminent scientists were pushing on Darwin's behalf.
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In other words, they were taking strong action to promote his theory of evolution.
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Rob: And it's possible that Patrick Matthew did not enjoy the same level of support.
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Neil: That could be true.
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So do you remember the quiz question from the beginning of the show, Rob?
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Rob: Indeed I do! I asked: What was Matthew's job? Was he ... a) a politician?
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b) a church minister? Or c) a horticulturalist?
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Neil: And I said c) horticulturalist.
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Rob: Yes. And that was the right answer, so well done!
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Just to remind you: a horticulturalist is a person
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whose job is to study and grow plants such as flowers, fruit and vegetables.
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But Matthew was interested in trees too.
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In fact, his ideas about evolution appear in an appendix
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or section giving extra information at the end of a 200-page book about wood!
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Neil: So maybe that's why we know Darwin's name but not Matthew's.
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It doesn't seem fair.
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Rob: Well, life's not fair, Neil.
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You should know that by now!
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Neil: I should, I should.
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Rob: So why don't we hear the words we learned today?
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Neil: OK. Here we go:
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evolution
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genius
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clever clogs
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natural selection
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adapt
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species
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transformative
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passed over
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allies
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on board
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prominent
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eminent
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horticulturalist
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appendix
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Rob: Thank you, Neil. Well, that's the end of today's 6 Minute English.
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There are plenty more to listen to at bbclearningenglish.com.
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Please join us again soon.
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Both: Bye.