Understanding Nature [electronic resource] : Case Studies in Comparative Epistemology / by Hub Zwart.
Tipo de material:
Comparative Epistemology -- Antecedents: Comparative Epistemology as an Outcome -- Animal Epistemology -- What is an Animal? A Comparative Epistemology of Animals -- What is a Whale? Moby-Dick, Marine Science and the Sublime -- What is a Dog? Animal Experiments and Animal Novels -- The Birth of a Research Animal -- Plants, Landscapes and Environments -- Aquaphobia, Tulipmania, Biophilia: A Moral Geography of the Dutch Landscape -- Taming Microbes: Ibsen's Dr. Stockmann as a Contemporary of Pasteur and Koch -- Pea Stories. Why was Mendel's Research Ignored in 1866 and Rediscovered in 1900? -- Jules Verne's Oeuvre: A Literary Encyclopaedia of Science and Technology -- Conclusion -- Epistemological Exercises: Towards a Typology of Knowledge Forms.
This summons clearly resonates with the ǣarchetypical imageǥ associated with water as a basic element, discussed in Chapter 2, water as the element of freedom, of mobility, of widening ones horizon. Although Nietzsche himself refrained from doing what he summoned others to do, scientists like Darwin and novelists like Melville actually went to sea. Darwin, although regarded by Nietzsche as an arid 6 and mediocre mind, exposed himself to the experience of a long-term trans-oceanic voyage in the course of which he did discover new worlds, new justifications, new moral watchwords even (ǣstruggle for lifeǥ) that were to have a tremendous impact on science, philosophy and even culture at large. Other perspectives are present in Moby-Dick as well, such as the theologians one, depicting the whale as the biblical Leviathan and the ocean as that part of the world where the great flood never abated. Indeed, the interpretation of marine p- nomena in Biblical terms is more or less omnipresent in the novel and also resounds in the views and language of the philosophical sailor and story-teller Ishmael. But what about the novelists whale? Actually, there is not one novelists whale. Ishmael-the-narrator unmistakably sides with the whalers point of view, but Melville-the-author is interested in, and tries to do justice to, a plurality of voices.
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