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Against “Revolution” and “Evolution”

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Abstract

Those standard historiographic themes of “evolution” and “revolution” need replacing. They perpetuate mid-Victorian scientists’ history of science. Historians’ history of science does well to take in the long run from the Greek and Hebrew heritages on, and to work at avoiding misleading anachronism and teleology. As an alternative to the usual “evo-revo” themes, a historiography of origins and species, of cosmologies (including microcosmogonies and macrocosmogonies) and ontologies, is developed here. The advantages of such a historiography are illustrated by looking briefly at a number of transitions the transition from Greek and Hebrew doctrines to their integrations by medieval authors; the transition from the Platonist, Aristotelian, Christian Aquinas to the Newtonian Buffon and to the no less Newtonian Lamarck; the departures the early Darwin made away from Lamarck’s and from Lyell’s views. Issues concerning historical thinking about nature, concerning essentialism and concerning classification are addressed in an attempt to challenge customary stereotypes. Questions about originality and influence are raised, especially concerning Darwin’s “tree of life” scheme. The broader historiography of Darwinian science as a social ideology, and as a “worldview,” is examined and the scope for revisions emphasised. Throughout, graduate students are encouraged to see this topic area not as worked out, but as full of opportunities for fresh contributions.

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References

  • Michael Jonathan Hodge (1990) “Origins and species before and after Darwin.” R.C. Olby G.N. Cantor J.R.R. Christie M.J.S. Hodge (Eds) Companion to the History of Modern Science Routledge London and New York 374–395

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  • Michael Jonathan Hodge (1991) Origins and Species: A Study of the Historical Sources of Darwinism and the Contexts of Some Other Accounts of Organic Diversity from Plato and Aristotle Garland New York

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  • Michael Jonathan Hodge Gregory Radick (Eds) (2003) The Cambridge Companion to Darwin Cambridge University Press Cambridge

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  • Sapp, Jan. 2003. Genesis. The Evolution of Biology. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

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Correspondence to Jonathan Hodge.

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Hodge, J. Against “Revolution” and “Evolution”. J Hist Biol 38, 101–121 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10739-004-6512-3

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10739-004-6512-3

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