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Evolution   /ˌɛvəlˈuʃən/  /ˌivəlˈuʃən/  /ˌɛvoʊlˈuʃən/  /ˌivoʊlˈuʃən/   Listen
noun
Evolution  n.  
1.
The act of unfolding or unrolling; hence, any process of growth or development; as, the evolution of a flower from a bud, or an animal from the egg.
2.
A series of things unrolled or unfolded. "The whole evolution of ages."
3.
(Geom.) The formation of an involute by unwrapping a thread from a curve as an evolute.
4.
(Arith. & Alg.) The extraction of roots; the reverse of involution.
5.
(Mil. & Naval) A prescribed movement of a body of troops, or a vessel or fleet; any movement designed to effect a new arrangement or disposition; a maneuver. "Those evolutions are best which can be executed with the greatest celerity, compatible with regularity."
6.
(Biol.) A general name for the history of the steps by which any living organism has acquired the morphological and physiological characters which distinguish it; a gradual unfolding of successive phases of growth or development.
7.
(Biol.) That theory of generation which supposes the germ to preexist in the parent, and its parts to be developed, but not actually formed, by the procreative act; opposed to epigenesis.
8.
(Metaph.) That series of changes under natural law which involves continuous progress from the homogeneous to the heterogeneous in structure, and from the single and simple to the diverse and manifold in quality or function. The process is by some limited to organic beings; by others it is applied to the inorganic and the psychical. It is also applied to explain the existence and growth of institutions, manners, language, civilization, and every product of human activity. The agencies and laws of the process are variously explained by different philosophrs. "Evolution is to me series with development."






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Evolution" Quotes from Famous Books



... first two or three centuries into a state of barbarism. Then slowly began to inch forward again. There were exceptions and the progress on one planet never exactly duplicated that on another, however the average was surprisingly close to both nadir and zenith, in terms of evolution ...
— Adaptation • Dallas McCord Reynolds

... from private homes by the same pursuit of the employer. Men are only in a state of evolution, and the animal instincts are still strong in them. The world has allowed them so much license, and society has been so lenient with their misdeeds, that it has been difficult for them to practise self-control and aspire to a higher standard. ...
— A Woman of the World - Her Counsel to Other People's Sons and Daughters • Ella Wheeler Wilcox

... founded on biology, founded on all the positive sciences, can give us the laws of humanity. Humanity, or human communities, are the organisms already prepared, or still in process of formation, and which are subservient to all the laws of the evolution of organisms. ...
— What To Do? - thoughts evoked by the census of Moscow • Count Lyof N. Tolstoi

... to outline himself upon the public mind as a distant character in American life. Literature has not yet got hold of him, and perhaps his evolution is not far enough advanced to make him as serviceable as the soldier of the Republic and the Empire, the relic of the Old Guard, was to Hugo and Balzac, the trooper of Italy and Egypt, the maimed hero ...
— Baddeck and That Sort of Thing • Charles Dudley Warner

... in mind is the long road of evolution,—the road you and I have traveled in the guise of humbler organisms, from the first unicellular life in the old Cambrian seas to the complex and highly specialized creature that rules supreme in the animal kingdom to-day. Surely a long journey, stretching through ...
— Time and Change • John Burroughs


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