Posted by
Kent McKay on Thursday, July 27, 2006 9:21:13 AM
In my quest of discovery I recently came across a book that interests me. I don’t believe the book has wide circulation so the title may not be familiar. However, I want to acknowledge the author, Vicki Jo Anderson. I am grateful for her work. For this book she put in much time to research and compile the information. This book tells a little about some men in history. This list of men, if I may describe the table of contents as such, was made by someone else, not Vicki Jo Anderson. She just took on the great endeavor of doing the monumental research and putting in one book for mine and other’s convenience. As mentioned I am glad she did this because of the men with which I can become acquainted. I have heard of some of these men before, however, others, since I have only started the first few pages, I have not even read their names.
The first I have read about is Louis Agassiz. He was a prominent natural scientist. It was Agassiz’s work which set forth the Ice Age. For this he became know as the Father of the Ice Age. Born in Switzerland, he later came to America where he established the Museum of Comparative Anatomy at Harvard. He was a contemporary of Charles Darwin.
There is much I find fascinating with Agassiz, but the idea that fascinated me to the point that I paused my reading is that I have not heard much about him before. What’s more is that we hear very little about his ideas as he studied fossils.
I quote from page nine and ten of Vicki Jo Anderson’s book and include the notes of her research:
For Agassiz, to discover the structure of nature was to engage our brain with thought similar to the Creator’s: "In our study of natural objects we are approaching the thoughts of the Creator, reading His Conceptions, interpreting a system that is His and not ours." 1
Darwin, on the other hand, ventured where Agassiz refused to go. Darwin "overstepped the boundaries of knowledge and allowed his imagination to supply links which science does not furnish." 2 This Agassiz steadfastly refused to do. He stated: "A physical fact is as sacred as a moral principle. Our own nature demands from us this double allegiance." 3
1 Agassiz, Louis. Methods of Study in Natural History. Boston: Ticknor and Fields, 1863, p 14.
2 Marcou, Jules. Life, Letters, and Works of Louis Agassiz. New York: Macmillan and Co., 1896, p. 209.
3 Agassiz, Elizabeth, Louis Agassiz: His Life and Correspondence. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin, 1885, 2:781.
If Agassiz and Darwin were contemporaries in the annals of history, why are they not contemporaries on the pages of textbooks? How many people are able to talk about Darwin and how many are able to talk about Agassiz? Is not an education system intellectually dishonest when it says that only the ideas expressed by Darwin exist while it buries the ideas expressed by Agassiz? Why are not their ideas compared one against the other?
I guess in my quests, there are questions. Perhaps there are statements too.
I’ll end this post here. Maybe later other post will continue.