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    Revision as of 22:38, 3 February 2005 by 212.202.57.141 (talk)
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    From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) [web1913]:

     Evolution \Ev`o*lu"tion\, n. [L. evolutio an unrolling: cf. F.
        ['e]volution evolution. See {Evolve}.]
       
      1. The act of unfolding or unrolling; hence, in the process
           of growth; 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. --Dr. H. More.
    
        3. (Geom.) The formation of an involute by unwrapping a
           thread from a curve as an evolute. --Hutton.
    
        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.
                                                       --Campbell.
    
        6. (Biol.)
           (a) 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.
           (b) That theory of generation which supposes the germ to
               pre["e]xist in the parent, and its parts to be
               developed, but not actually formed, by the procreative
               act; -- opposed to epigenesis.
    
        7. (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
           pocess 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.
                                                       --Gladstone.
    

    From WordNet (r) 2.0 [wn]:

     evolution
          n 1: a process in which something passes by degrees to a
               different stage (especially a more advanced or mature
               stage); "the development of his ideas took many years";
               "the evolution of Greek civilization"; "the slow
               development of her skill as a writer" [syn: {development}]
               [ant: {degeneration}]
          2: (biology) the sequence of events involved in the
             evolutionary development of a species or taxonomic group
             of organisms [syn: {phylogeny}, {phylogenesis}]
    
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