Science

Why Teaching Evolution Is A Must

  • If reports of NCERT dropping evolution from Class X textbooks are true, it is indeed regrettable.
  • Not only should evolution be re-included in the syllabus, it should be made the very basis of teaching biology in India—right from the primary classes.

Aravindan NeelakandanApr 21, 2023, 09:14 PM | Updated Apr 22, 2023, 09:21 AM IST
Charles Darwin who pioneered the theory of evolution (Spencer Arnold/GettyImages)

Charles Darwin who pioneered the theory of evolution (Spencer Arnold/GettyImages)


"Nothing in biology makes sense except in the light of evolution"—Theodosius Dobzhansky, 1973.


Disturbing news reports of the NCERT removing Darwinian evolution from the tenth standard textbooks are doing the rounds.

If these reports are true, irrespective of the reason why the lesson on evolution has been removed, it is not a welcome decision.

If it has been removed on purpose then it is condemnable.

Indian culture and civilisation actually pride themselves in this aspect - that we have no problem in accepting evolution.

The greatest spiritual giants of India of the modern era, Swami Vivekananda and Sri Aurobindo accepted evolution and built upon it. From Sankhya philosophy to Veer Savarkar evolution, has been integral part of Indian worldview.

Even irrespective of what the worldview of our ancient scriptures are, evolution has to be taught because it is a fact. It is a fact that forms the basis of biology.

In fact our civilisational uniqueness of accepting evolution with ease, actually should have made our biology textbooks better and an example to the world.

In the present scenario, evolution is being taught at the level of tenth standard. What a civilisational Indian Government should have done is that, it should have made Darwinian evolution as the very basis of teaching biology in India - right from the primary classes.

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Evolution is a common connecting thread through the various domains of biology, psychology, anthropology and sociology. It is essential to understand our biochemistry, our genomes and hence it is essential for the very survival of humanity.

While other civilisations had problems with evolution, thanks to Sankhya and the diminishing of a creator-deity in Indian worldview, we have had no problem in accepting evolution.

Let us not squander it.

So it is the earnest prayer of this writer that for whatever reason, if evolution has indeed been dropped from the NCERT syllabus, it should be reinstated.

The NCERT should also take a proactive step of making evolution and ecology the basis of biology education right from the primary class.

Evolution is not a hypothesis. It is a fact attested by fossil records, biochemistry and genetics. Darwin in fact changed the worldview of entire biology from the concept of a creator-driven worldview to a more organic, dynamic worldview.

Perhaps the educationists in NCERT will do well to listen to what the famous British biologist and wife of polymath evolutionist JBS Haldane, Helen Spurway, who became an Indian and who adhered to a Hindu way of life, told about evolution.

Eminent Indian-born geneticist Dr. Krishna Dronamraju (1937-2020) whose PhD guide was JBS Haldane himself, had in his last book written in detail about the views of Haldane and particularly Dr. Spurway on evolution. It is worth quoting here in full:

Are we to forego all these and earn our generation and civilisation a bad name because of whatever reason, evolution has been dropped now?


The Government should proactively intervene and should not only bring back evolution but make it even more prominent in the syllabus.

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