With the opening of this page, I have begun using Pinterest as a way of temporarily collecting webfinds (where possible) before moving them over here.
From: Charles Darwin's 'On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection' at Loyal Books.
(My Pinterest.)
From: Michael Jasper's 'Evolution' at Flickr.
(My Pinterest.)
From: darksol.net 'human conditions human relations'.
(My Pinterest.)
From: Project Five (at Cigar Box Nation).
The Evolving Darwin Action Figure Play Set, from Cool Psychology Stuff.
Evolution of the Cylons, from ByYourCommand.net.
From the eBook 'Proving Darwin: Making Biology Mathematical' by Gregory Chaitin.
From the eBook 'The Ideas of Life and Death' by Vedang Sati.
Four Lego versions:
As seen on the television programme 'The Secret World of Lego' Channel 4 on Sunday 14th June 2015:
A caveman version found on the web (at brickpicker.com):
From: BBC Radio 4 - A History of Ideas, 'The Fourth Revolution'.
From: BBC4 (23rd June 2015) 'Your Inner Fish: An Evolutionary Story, 3 - Your Inner Monkey'.
From: 'The End Of Capitalism' at The Guardian (dot com).
From: 'The Naked Ape' by Desmond Morris.
From: Shedding of the Ego.
I found this on my iPod. I don't remember were I found it. That's what comes of putting things aside for 'safe keeping'.
I was given the following badge and flyer at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival (2015) and a nice young lady called Tara allowed me to take a picture of her tee-shirt. Tangram Theatre Company were doing a three part musical production called 'Scientrilogy'. Hence Charles Darwin (bushy beard and monkey on head), Albert Einstein (E=m...) and Marie Curie (glow-in-the-dark radium) can each be seen below:
This was sent to me by an email correspondent in August 2015. I do not know anything about who drew it.
Found on Facebook. I think he must be a bee-keeper.
From the Harvard Department of Human Evolutionary Biology website. A more thoughtful - and though-provoking - version. (Is that also a hand in the flames?)
From the BBC News website, as seen (bottom right corner of the screen) at a meeting describing the discovery of Homo naledi.
In September 2015, the BBC started a series of radio and television programmes on artificial intelligence. Some articles also appeared on the BBC Technology webpages. The image above was used in relation to an article entitled 'Brynjolfsson and McAfee: The jobs that AI can't replace' by Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee. It's a version of the one the BBC has used before. This time with a robot in the (seemingly) most advanced position.
My Pinterest board: Human Progress
(An extension of this site and repository for some images not found here.)