Jenkins Bill
Science Studies Unit, School of Social and Political Science, University of Edinburgh, Chisholm House, High School Yards, Edinburgh, EH1 1LZ, Scotland, UK.
J Hist Biol. 2016 Aug;49(3):527-57. doi: 10.1007/s10739-015-9425-4.
This paper sheds new light on the prevalence of evolutionary ideas in Scotland in the early nineteenth century and establish what connections existed between the espousal of evolutionary theories and adherence to the directional history of the earth proposed by Abraham Gottlob Werner and his Scottish disciples. A possible connection between Wernerian geology and theories of the transmutation of species in Edinburgh in the period when Charles Darwin was a medical student in the city was suggested in an important 1991 paper by James Secord. This study aims to deepen our knowledge of this important episode in the history of evolutionary ideas and explore the relationship between these geological and evolutionary discourses. To do this it focuses on the circle of natural historians around Robert Jameson, Wernerian geologist and professor of natural history at the University of Edinburgh from 1804 to 1854. From the evidence gathered here there emerges a clear confirmation that the Wernerian model of geohistory facilitated the acceptance of evolutionary explanations of the history of life in early nineteenth-century Scotland. As Edinburgh was at this time the most important center of medical education in the English-speaking world, this almost certainly influenced the reception and development of evolutionary ideas in the decades that followed.
本文揭示了19世纪早期进化思想在苏格兰的流行情况,并确定了进化理论的拥护与亚伯拉罕·戈特洛布·维尔纳及其苏格兰弟子所提出的地球定向历史观之间存在何种联系。詹姆斯·塞科德在1991年发表的一篇重要论文中指出,在查尔斯·达尔文于爱丁堡求学医学院期间,维尔纳地质学与物种变异理论之间可能存在某种联系。本研究旨在加深我们对进化思想史上这一重要事件的了解,并探讨这些地质学和进化论述之间的关系。为此,它聚焦于围绕罗伯特·詹姆森的自然历史学家圈子,詹姆森是一名维尔纳地质学家,于1804年至1854年在爱丁堡大学担任自然历史教授。从这里收集到的证据清楚地证实,维尔纳的地质历史模型促进了19世纪早期苏格兰对生命历史进化解释的接受。由于当时爱丁堡是英语世界最重要的医学教育中心,这几乎肯定影响了随后几十年进化思想的接受和发展。