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Religion and science in the 19th century

A satirical cartoon depicting Charles Darwin as a monkey, 1871
Figure caption,
A satirical cartoon depicting Charles Darwin as a monkey, 1871.

In 1859, when Stevenson was nine years old, Charles Darwin published The Origin of Species. This book became famous for introducing the to the public.

Many people saw it as an attack on religion, because the book made it impossible to believe that God created the world in seven days.

Darwin put forward the theory that all life, including humans, has evolved from more primitive forms. The transformation of Jekyll to the ape-like Hyde links to this idea of a primitive nature inside us.

The book's release came at a time when many people saw science and a belief in religion and the supernatural as being at odds with each another. Many felt they had to choose between the two. And many believed that science had become dangerous and was meddling in matters which only God had control over. This is what Jekyll does in the novel.

The idea of a scientist playing God and suffering the consequences suggest influence from Mary Shelley's Frankenstein

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