Overtures to Biology [Book Review]

Review of Metaphysics 18 (2):385-385 (1964)
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Abstract

Theories of immanence and botanical analogy dominated the work of the eighteenth-century naturalists. They believed, with little factual support, that electricity was the immanent principle of the universe and that plants and animals had truly analogical functions. When a science of biology finally came into being in the nineteenth century, the romantic poets decried the positivistic approach to nature; but it was often overlooked that their poetry voiced anew the concepts of the eighteenth-century speculation. The super-abundance of quotations makes for laborious reading, although the author deftly threads his narrative through them.—A. B. D.

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