Jordan J M
University of Texas Rio Grande Valley, Edinburgh, USA.
Hist Philos Life Sci. 2016 Apr;38(1):90-116. doi: 10.1007/s40656-015-0094-6. Epub 2016 Jan 21.
Beginning the nineteenth-century and continuing down to the present, many authors writing on the history of geology and paleontology have attributed the theory that fossils were inorganic formations produced within the earth, rather than by the deposition of living organisms, to the ancient Greeks and Romans. Some have even gone so far as to claim this was the consensus view in the classical period up through the Middle Ages. In fact, such a notion was entirely foreign to ancient and medieval thought and only appeared within the manifold of 'Renaissance episteme,' the characteristics of which have often been projected backwards by some historians onto earlier periods. This paper endeavors to correct this error, explain the development of the Renaissance view, describe certain ancient precedents thereof, and trace the history of the misinterpretation in the literature.
从19世纪开始一直延续到现在,许多撰写地质学史和古生物学史的作者都将化石是地球内部产生的无机形成物而非生物体沉积形成的这一理论,归因于古希腊人和古罗马人。有些人甚至声称,在古典时期直至中世纪,这都是一种共识观点。事实上,这样的观念与古代和中世纪的思想完全相悖,只是出现在“文艺复兴知识型”之中,而有些历史学家常常将其特征追溯到更早的时期。本文致力于纠正这一错误,解释文艺复兴观点的发展,描述其某些古代先例,并追溯文献中错误解读的历史。