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The Naming of Names by Anna Pavord
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The Naming of Names

by Anna Pavord

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150240,401 (3.71)1
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Bloomsbury USA (2005), Hardcover

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The extent of my awareness of the naming of plants a few weeks ago was 'Isn't that something to do with Linnaeus?'. Well, this book has put me right in a big way. Linnaeus features only in the epilogue: the main body of the story takes the reader from a Greek, Theophrastus, in the fourth century BC to John Ray, an Englishman of the seventeenth century AD, in the search for the best way to classify plants. It sounds like a dry subject, but the personalities, struggles and inter-relationships of the key players are beautifully portrayed, with room for the personality of the author to permeate the text too. This work is scholarly and accessible and sumptuously illustrated with coloured depictions of plants, maps and portraits. A treasure of a volume. ( )
  mandahill | Jun 3, 2008 |
Great book! Amazing illustrations.
The author is very good at telling a long history of over 2000 years on how a standard taxonomy was created for all plants and living things.
For some reason Anna Pavord likes to divide all the historical characters in "good guys" and "bad guys". May be it is true, but sometime reading the book I have the impression of watching an Hollywood movie. As in every respectable film, the good guys at the end prevail.
The battle is not yet over! Take a look at Wikipedia (I'm talking about the English version) and you will see that the scientific notation is not used as a standard way to name plants. For reason I completely ignore Americans still prefer the ambiguous local notation over the scientific one (not surprisingly, they still discussing about creationism...). ( )
  folini | Feb 4, 2008 |
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To Colin Hamilton and Kulgin Duval,

who were there at the beginning.
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Historiae animalium (Gesner)

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