
In Our Time The Natural Order
12 snips
Apr 6, 2000 Science enthusiast Melvyn Bragg and guests dive into the flaws of taxonomy, inspired by Borges' absurd animal categorizations. They discuss Linnaeus' influence, Darwin's evolutionary perspective, perfect archetypes, museum organization, and the clash between Darwin and Linnaeus on species classification and natural selection.
AI Snips
Chapters
Transcript
Episode notes
Linnaeus's Binomial System
- Before Linnaeus's binomial nomenclature, species were described using long, descriptive phrases in Latin.
- Linnaeus introduced the genus-species shorthand (e.g., Panthera Leo) for practicality.
Linnaeus's Static View of Nature
- Linnaeus viewed nature as static, like the periodic table, classifying minerals alongside plants and animals.
- He aimed to understand nature's hierarchical pattern, not explain its origin, reflecting a pre-evolutionary mindset.
The Archetype
- Linnaeus's archetype was the perfect, idealized version of a species existing in God's mind, distinct from real-world variations.
- Naturalists aimed to discern this archetype amidst the imperfections of reality.

