Nicolaus Copernicus (1473–1543)
Recreated the work of Aristarchos of Samos (310–230 BCE), and touched public awareness this time. Died on publishing his work in 1543, so never met his critics. The publishing was simultaneous with Andreas Vesalius (1514–1564)'s massive update to anatomy.
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Gottfried Leibniz (1646–1716)
Created calculus & we use his notation, not Newton's. Created distinction between fact-truth and logical truth.
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Jean-Baptiste Lamarck (1744–1829)
"Everything we know about plants and animals shall be a science. I shall name it biology."
- Histoire naturelle des animaux sans vertebres
- Delimits and defines biology
- Opens up for physiology, genetics, etc
Military service. Accident? Quit. French Revolution -> King died. …
All living things share some attributes. Metal doesn't share anything with us. Living things change over time, grow and die.
Got a partial idea of evolution, said that if giraffes stretch their necks to reach leaves, they might lengthen their necks and pass that characteristic on to their children.
Of course, giraffes are also spotted in appearance, and the idea that giraffes actively tried to be spotty was a difficult one to swallow. Darwin would solve that.
