Thesis ID: CBB001567452

Finding Patterns in Nature: Asa Gray's Plant Geography and Collecting Networks (1830s--1860s) (2013)

unapi

Hung, Kuang-chi (Author)


Browne, E. Janet
Harvard University
Pfister, Donald H.
Browne, E. Janet
Kuriyama, Shigehisa
Pfister, Donald H.
Harrison, Henrietta
Kuriyama, Shigehisa
Harrison, Henrietta


Publication Date: 2013
Edition Details: Advisor: Browne, Janet E; Committee Members: Kuriyama, Shigehisa, Pfister, Donald H., Harrison, Henrietta.
Physical Details: 707 pp.
Language: English

It is well known that American botanist Asa Gray's 1859 paper on the floristic similarities between Japan and the United States was among the earliest applications of Charles Darwin's evolutionary theory in plant geography. Commonly known as Gray's "disjunction thesis," Gray's diagnosis of that previously inexplicable pattern not only provoked his famous debate with Louis Agassiz but also secured his role as the foremost advocate of Darwin and Darwinism in the United States. Making use of previously unknown archival materials, this dissertation examines the making of Gray's disjunction thesis and its relation to his collecting networks. I first point out that, as far back as the 1840s, Gray had identified remarkable "analogies" between the flora of East Asia and that of North America. By analyzing Gray and his contemporaries' "free and liberal exchange of specimens," I argue that Gray at the time was convinced that "a particular plan" existed in nature, and he considered that the floristic similarities between Japan and eastern North America manifested this plan. In the 1850s, when Gray applied himself to enumerating collections brought back by professional collectors supported by the subscription system and appointed in governmental surveying expeditions, his view of nature was then replaced by one that regarded the flora as merely "a catalogue of species." I argue that it was by undertaking the manual labor of cataloging species and by charging subscription fees for catalogued species that Gray established his status as a metropolitan botanist and as the "mint" that produced species as a currency for transactions in botanical communities. Finally, I examine the Gray-Darwin correspondence in the 1850s and the expedition that brought Gray's collector to Japan. I argue that Gray's thesis cannot be considered Darwinian as historians of science have long understood the term, and that its conception was part of the United States' scientific imperialism in East Asia. In light of recent studies focusing on the history of field sciences, this dissertation urges that a close examination of a biogeographical discovery like Gray's thesis is impossible without considering the institutional, cultural, and material aspects that tie the closets of naturalists to the field destinations of collectors.

...More

Description Cited in Dissertation Abstracts International-A 75/02(E), Aug 2014. Proquest Document ID: 1465060039.


Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB001567452/

Similar Citations

Article Thorvaldsen, Steinar; Øhrstrøm, Peter; (2013)
Darwin's Perplexing Paradox: Intelligent Design in Nature (/isis/citation/CBB001201341/)

Article Lennox, James G.; (2010)
The Darwin/Gray Correspondence 1857--1869: An Intelligent Discussion about Chance and Design (/isis/citation/CBB001034598/)

Book A. Hunter Dupree; (1988)
Asa Gray: American Botanist, Friend of Darwin (/isis/citation/CBB638090619/)

Article S. Mesquita; M. Menezes De Sequeira; C. Castel-Branco; (2021)
Richard Thomas Lowe (1802–1874) and his correspondence networks: Botanical exchanges from Madeira (/isis/citation/CBB554291675/)

Book The Editors of the Darwin Correspondence Project; Secord, James A.; Burkhardt, Frederick; Charles Darwin; (2023)
The Correspondence of Charles Darwin: Volume 30, 1882 (/isis/citation/CBB019640041/)

Article Janet Browne; (2022)
Reflections on Darwin Historiography (/isis/citation/CBB669838788/)

Article Paul White; (2022)
The Many Lives of Darwin’s Letters (/isis/citation/CBB415627399/)

Article Bernard Lightman; (2022)
The Darwin Correspondence Project and Pedagogy (/isis/citation/CBB019978348/)

Book Frederick Burkhardt; James A. Secord; (2018)
The Correspondence of Charles Darwin: Volume 26, 1878 (/isis/citation/CBB351027289/)

Book Charles Darwin; Frederick Burkhardt; James A. Secord; (2015)
The Correspondence of Charles Darwin, Volume 23: 1875 (/isis/citation/CBB427468341/)

Book André Michaux; Charlie Williams; Norman, Eliane; Walter K. Taylor; (2020)
André Michaux in North America: Journals and Letters, 1785–1797 (/isis/citation/CBB832729189/)

Article Porter, Duncan M.; (1993)
On the road to the Origin with Darwin, Hooker, and Gray (/isis/citation/CBB000037825/)

Article Hunter, T. Russell; (2012)
Making a Theist out of Darwin: Asa Gray's Post-Darwinian Natural Theology (/isis/citation/CBB001250446/)

Article Ambrose, C. T.; (2010)
Darwin's Historical Sketch---An American Predecessor: C. S. Rafinesque (/isis/citation/CBB001031431/)

Book England, Richard; (2003)
Design after Darwin, 1860--1900 (/isis/citation/CBB000330936/)

Authors & Contributors
Burkhardt, Frederick
Secord, James A.
Darwin, Charles Robert
Ambrose, C. T.
Browne, E. Janet
Cook, William J.
Journals
Journal of the History of Biology
Archives of Natural History
Perspectives in Biology and Medicine
Perspectives on Science
Science and Education
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences
Publishers
Cambridge University Press
Johns Hopkins University Press
Thoemmes
University of Alabama Press
Concepts
Correspondence and corresponding
Botany
Evolution
Communication within scientific contexts
Darwinism
Science and religion
People
Darwin, Charles Robert
Gray, Asa
Burkhardt, Frederick
Dale, Thomas
Darwin, Francis
Engelmann, George
Time Periods
19th century
18th century
20th century, late
21st century
Modern
Places
Great Britain
United States
North America
Ireland
Germany
Belfast, Ireland
Institutions
Royal Commission on Vivisection (1875)
Comments

Be the first to comment!

{{ comment.created_by.username }} on {{ comment.created_on | date:'medium' }}

Log in or register to comment