Article ID: CBB709081900

“How nationality influences Opinion”: Darwinism and palaeontology in France (1859–1914) (2017)

unapi

This paper discusses the “non-reception” of Darwin's works and concepts in French palaeontology and palaeoanthropology between 1859 and 1914. Indeed, this integration was difficult, biased and belated, for ideological, intellectual and epistemological reasons: Clémence Royer's biased 1862 translation of Darwin's Origin of Species pulled its ideas toward “social darwinism”, making them less attractive to the natural sciences. - French nationalism and the authority of religion, which imposed Cuvier's thinking until late into the century - the dominance of Lamarckian and neo-Lamarckian transformism in France, both in biology and in paleontology, which proposed the notion of orthogenetic laws and environmental determinations, and refused darwinian evolutionary mechanisms - obstacles inherent to the application of Darwin's concepts to palaeontology, namely the impossibility to identify evolutionary mechanisms through the fossil record, which was stressed by Darwin himself and underlined in turn by 19th century French palaeontologists. However, as I argue, in the course of the examined period, French palaeontology grew from refusal to a better understanding and evaluation of Darwin's thinking. The quest for intermediary forms, the construction of branching evolutionary trees and the attempts to reconstruct human biological and cultural evolution were important efforts toward an integration of some aspects of Darwinian views and practices into French palaeontology and plaeoanthropology. The 1947 Paris conference which brought together American Neo-darwinists and French paleontologists made Darwinian concepts better understood and triggered a revival of French palaeontology from the 1960s.

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Authors & Contributors
Madison, Paige
Kjaergaard, Peter C.
Menez, Alex
Meiring, Henry-James
Kern, Emily Margaret
Cataldi, Maddalena
Journals
History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences
Earth Sciences History: Journal of the History of the Earth Sciences Society
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science
Science in Context
Science as Culture
Publishers
University of California, San Diego
Princeton University
Concepts
Fossils
Paleoanthropology
Human evolution
Paleontology
Physical anthropology
Evolution
People
Darwin, Charles Robert
Koch, Albert C.
Wallace, Alfred Russel
Tobias, Phillip V.
Royer, Clémence
Lankester, Edwin Ray
Time Periods
19th century
20th century
20th century, early
Pleistocene
21st century
Places
France
Gibraltar
London (England)
South Africa
Scandinavia; Nordic countries
North America
Institutions
Académie des Sciences, Paris
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