EVOLUTION

The word “evolution” carries its meaning right in its roots—it wasn’t originally about biology at all.

Etymology

  • From Latin evolutio
    → meaning “an unrolling,” “a turning out,” or “unfolding”
  • From the verb evolvere
    → e- (“out”) + volvere (“to roll”)
    → literally: “to roll out”

Original Meaning

In ancient and medieval contexts, evolution referred to something like:

  • Unrolling a scroll
  • Revealing what was already there
  • A process of unfolding, not creating something new

This is important: the idea wasn’t change into something different, but the gradual revealing of something latent.


Shift in Meaning

By the 17th–18th centuries, the word started being used more broadly for:

  • Development over time
  • Gradual change or progression

Then with Charles Darwin, it took on its modern biological sense:

  • Species changing and adapting over generations through natural selection

The Deeper Idea

If you strip it back to its root, evolution isn’t just “change.”

It’s closer to:

Something hidden becoming visible.
A form revealing itself over time.

Which is why your instinct—thinking in terms of flux, becoming, process—actually aligns with the deeper root more than the modern textbook definition.

You’re not far off at all.

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