Article ID: CBB335016637

Trees, Coral, and Seaweed: An Interpretation of Sketches Found in Darwin’s Papers (2020)

unapi

The sole diagram in On the Origin of Species is generally considered to be merely an illustration of Darwin’s ideas, but such an interpretation ignores the fact that Darwin himself expressly stated that the diagram helped him to discover and express his ideas. This article demonstrates that developing the so-called “tree diagram” substantially aided Darwin’s heuristics. This demonstration is based on an interpretation of the diagram and of 17 sketches found in Darwin’s scientific papers. The key to this interpretation is the meaning that Darwin assigned to the graphic elements (points, lines, and spaces) he used to construct the preliminary sketches and the diagram. I argue that each of the sketches contributed to the shaping of Darwin’s ideas and that, in their succession, each added new elements that ultimately resulted in the fully developed published diagram.

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Authors & Contributors
Krause, Kelly
Priest, Greg
Lo, Melissa
Scholl, Raphael
Lorenat, Jemma
Law, Jules
Journals
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences
Victorian Studies
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science
Spontaneous Generations
Renaissance Quarterly
Public Understanding of Science
Publishers
University of Pittsburgh Press
University of Chicago Press
MIT Press
Brill
Columbia University
Concepts
Visual representation; visual communication
Scientific illustration
Diagrams
Communication of scientific ideas
Communication within scientific contexts
Textbooks
People
Darwin, Charles Robert
Snow, John
Kepler, Johannes
Galilei, Galileo
Finé, Oronce
Descartes, René
Time Periods
19th century
Renaissance
17th century
20th century, late
21st century
18th century
Places
France
Great Britain
England
Italy
Venice (Italy)
Institutions
Università di Pisa
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