TY - BOOK
T1 - Special issue of Notes and Records of the Royal Society: Avebury’s circle: the science of John Lubbock
A2 - Clark, John F. M.
PY - 2014/3/20
Y1 - 2014/3/20
N2 - Notes and Records of the Royal Society, Special issue 'Avebury’s circle: the science of John Lubbock' organised and edited by John Clark. https://royalsocietypublishing.org/toc/rsnr/2014/68/1 Special Issue also contains: Clark, John (2014). John Lubbock, science, and the liberal intellectual. Notes and Records of the Royal Society, 68(1), 65-87. https://doi.org/10.1098/rsnr.2013.0068. Article abstract: John Lubbock's longest-standing scientific research interest was entomology. Some of his earliest systematic investigations of insect and marine life began under the tutelage of Darwin. Darwin shaped the trajectory of, and the programme for, Lubbock's natural history work. However, to understand John Lubbock's identity as a scientist, he must be located within the context of the Victorian ‘intellectual’. This paper traces Lubbock's entomological work from its early development under Darwin to his later work on insect sensory physiology and comparative psychology. Far from being the death of his scientific career, Lubbock's entry into Parliament marked the pinnacle of his career as a scientific intellectual. He built on his early work on invertebrate anatomy, physiology and taxonomy, and on his archaeological and anthropological research to expound his vision of mental evolution. His research on ‘savages’, on ants, bees and wasps, and on his dog, ‘Van’, permitted him to expatiate upon the psychic unity of all sentient beings, which, in turn, underpinned his overarching educational programme.
AB - Notes and Records of the Royal Society, Special issue 'Avebury’s circle: the science of John Lubbock' organised and edited by John Clark. https://royalsocietypublishing.org/toc/rsnr/2014/68/1 Special Issue also contains: Clark, John (2014). John Lubbock, science, and the liberal intellectual. Notes and Records of the Royal Society, 68(1), 65-87. https://doi.org/10.1098/rsnr.2013.0068. Article abstract: John Lubbock's longest-standing scientific research interest was entomology. Some of his earliest systematic investigations of insect and marine life began under the tutelage of Darwin. Darwin shaped the trajectory of, and the programme for, Lubbock's natural history work. However, to understand John Lubbock's identity as a scientist, he must be located within the context of the Victorian ‘intellectual’. This paper traces Lubbock's entomological work from its early development under Darwin to his later work on insect sensory physiology and comparative psychology. Far from being the death of his scientific career, Lubbock's entry into Parliament marked the pinnacle of his career as a scientific intellectual. He built on his early work on invertebrate anatomy, physiology and taxonomy, and on his archaeological and anthropological research to expound his vision of mental evolution. His research on ‘savages’, on ants, bees and wasps, and on his dog, ‘Van’, permitted him to expatiate upon the psychic unity of all sentient beings, which, in turn, underpinned his overarching educational programme.
KW - Lubbock
KW - Nineteenth-century science
KW - Liberalism
KW - Intellectuals
UR - https://royalsocietypublishing.org/toc/rsnr/2014/68/1
U2 - 10.1098/rsnr.2013.0068
DO - 10.1098/rsnr.2013.0068
M3 - Book
SN - 0000000000
T3 - Notes and Records of the Royal Society
BT - Special issue of Notes and Records of the Royal Society: Avebury’s circle: the science of John Lubbock
PB - Royal Society Publishing
ER -