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Lamarck : The Mythical Precursor

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This book presents a highly readable account of Lamarck's theories and the debates they generated.

A child of the Enlightenment and supporter of the French Revolution, Lamarck emerges in this study as a bold and intellectually adventurous pioneer whose early work centered on meteorology and botany and who became the leading authority on invertebrates of his period.

It strips away the myth of Lamarck as precursor to Darwin, making the case that the only way to see him, or any figure in the history of science, is within the scientific, religious, philosophical, and political context of his time, rather than in the light of what we know now.

Jean-Baptiste Lamarck (1744-1829) was elected to the French Academy of Sciences, yet he had to contend with scientific conservatism ("Do not meddle with my Bible " Napoleon is said to have commanded the biologists): he eventually died penniless and blind, his work condemned.

Despite its shaky status Lamarckism, which holds that traits acquired during a creature's lifetime can be passed on to its offspring, is currently enjoying a resurgence of interest and has been the subject of several scientific papers and a host of experiments. "Wrong" theories tend to be avoided in discussions of the history of science and the true value of Lamarck's work is only now beginning to be appreciated.

This book does not attempt to rehabilitate Lamarck but instead places him in his milieu showing that his theories are relevant to a problem still under discussion - the debate on innate versus acquired characteristics - providing a rich contribution to the history of ideas.

Madeleine Barthelemy-Madaule is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Picardie and directsthe Interdisciplinary Research Center in the History of Ideas there.

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Product Details
MIT Press
026202179X / 9780262021791
Hardback
01/01/1982
United States
192 pages
148 x 203 mm, 394 grams
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