Discovering birds : the emergence of ornithology as a scientific discipline, 1760-1850
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Bibliographic Information
Discovering birds : the emergence of ornithology as a scientific discipline, 1760-1850
(Johns Hopkins paperbacks)
Johns Hopkins University Press, 1997
- : pbk
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The emergence of ornithology as a scientific discipline, 1760-1850
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Originally published as: The emergence of ornithology as a scientific discipline, 1760-1850. Dordrecht : D. Reidel, c1982
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
In Discovering Birds, Paul Lawrence Farber rejects the view that eighteenth-century natural history disappeared with the rise of nineteenth-century biology. In this penetrating case study of the history of ornithology, Farber demonstrates interesting continuities: as natural history evolved into individual sciences (botany, geology, and zoology) and specialties (entomology and ichthyology), the study of birds emerged as a distinct scientific discipline that remained observational and taxonomic. Ornithologists continued to see one of their primary tasks as classification, and they found no need to alter their approach. Their efforts were greatly aided at the end of the eighteenth century as colonization and exploration brought new dataa plethora of exotic and previously unknown birds. By the mid-nineteenth century, ornithology had become a scientific discipline with international experts, a large empirical base, and a rigorous methodology of watching and cataloging.
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