Research Catalog

Constantine Samuel Rafinesque : a voice in the American wilderness / Leonard Warren.

Title
Constantine Samuel Rafinesque : a voice in the American wilderness / Leonard Warren.
Author
Warren, Leonard, 1924-
Publication
Lexington, Ky. : University Press of Kentucky, c2004.

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StatusFormatAccessCall NumberItem Location
TextUse in library QH31.R13 W37 2004Off-site

Details

Description
xiv, 252 p. : ill.; 24 cm.
Summary
"Half a century after the death of Constantine Samuel Rafinesque in 1840, a small number of researchers, biographers, and historians of natural science suggested that the famed botanist's last name should become the newest adjective in the English lexicon. Had they succeeded, "rafinesque" would have forever been a literary tool to describe those poor souls, occasionally reaching but always aspiring to lofty heights, who brought chronic calamity and defeat upon themselves through grandiose, narcissistic visions of their own importance." "Why did some push for one man's name to become a signifier of a whole range of human behavior? As noted professor, researcher, doctor, and author Leonard Warren shows in this long-overdue biography, Rafinesque displayed unique extravagance in his behavior, his imagination, and his lightning intelligence. Among his achievements were pre-Darwinian theories of the gradual evolution of differing plant species through minute changes in response to environmental stimuli. (Darwin later acknowledged Rafinesque's pioneering work in the field.) Rafinesque also named more than 6,700 species of plants during his travels - mostly on foot - across the length and breadth of nineteenth-century America." "Rafinesque was the first professor of natural history west of the Allegheny Mountains, teaching at Transylvania University in Lexington, Kentucky. Yet despite his accomplishments, he never lacked for detractors, and he rarely failed to provide his adversaries with rich fodder for criticism. His imagination sometimes dominated his analytic sense and rendered much of his work unreliable at best and nonsensical or fraudulent at worst. Also prone to petulance, jealousy, paranoia, and self-righteousness, Rafinesque alienated his colleagues and offended most in the scientific establishment who were in positions to influence his destiny. Their overwhelming discomfort with Rafinesque, and their repeated rejections of his often brilliant but unpredictable work, diminished his status and hurt him both personally and professionally during his later years. Tragically, upon his death, Rafinesque's wealth of unpublished writings and his massive collection of plant specimens were destroyed or scattered without regard."--BOOK JACKET.
Subjects
Genre/Form
Biography.
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references (p. [231]-240) and index.
ISBN
081312316X (alk. paper)
LCCN
2003024567
Owning Institutions
Columbia University Libraries