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Wiley InterScience | |||
![]() Journal of Religious HistoryVolume 31 Issue 2, Pages 131 - 150 Published Online: 19 Jun 2007 Journal compilation © 2009 Association for the Journal of Religious History
Abstract | Full Text: PDF (Size: 140K) | Related Articles | Citation Tracking "The Enchanter's Wand": Charles Darwin, Foreign Missions, and the Voyage of H.M.S. Beagle* Copyright © 2007 The Author Journal compilation © 2007 Association for the Journal of Religious History ABSTRACTIt often goes unmentioned that one of the primary purposes of the famous circumnavigation of H.M.S. Beagle was foreign missions. Charles Darwin, the voyage's most famous participant, was at best noncommittal about the missionary activity surrounding him for most of the trip. He emerged from the voyage, however, as an enthusiastic and outspoken proponent of missions. The British missions at Tahiti prompted him to change his view. Sailing to Tahiti, he read several accounts about the South Sea missions, and had already begun making arrangements to publish his "Diary" as a travel journal. Darwin became convinced that missionaries helped "advance" the natives toward "civilization" and thereafter enthusiastically defended missionaries in an ongoing public debate. |