Humboldtian science

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Humboldtian science is a term given to the movement in science in the 19th century. The ideals and central themes of Humboldtian science are the result of the work of German scientist Alexander von Humboldt. However, Humboldtian science is a movement and thus is not limited to the work done by Humboldt himself, but refers to many scientists and their works.

Alexander von Humboldt is known for his highly empirical scientific work and his best recognized works are his Personal Narrative and Kosmos. The term Humboldtian science is difficult to define simply, as it incorporates many ideals and concepts. Roughly speaking, Humboldtian science was a shift toward an understanding of the interconnectedness of nature through precise and accurate measurement. One central concept was what Humboldt called ‘terrestrial physics,’ which encompassed an extensive and pervasive study of the earth’s many features and forces with accurate scientific instrumentation. Humboldtian science is founded on a principle of ‘general equilibrium of forces.’ General equilibrium was the idea that there are infinite forces in nature that are in constant conflict, yet all forces balance each other out.

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[edit] Brief biography

Humboldt was born in Berlin in 1769 and worked as a Prussian mining official in the 1790s until, in 1797, he quit and began collecting scientific knowledge and equipment.[1] His extensive wealth aided his infatuation with the spirit of Romanticism; he amassed an extensive collection of scientific instruments and tools as well as a sizeable library. In 1799 Humboldt, under the protection of king Charles VII of Spain, left for South America, toting all of his tools and books.[2] The purpose of the voyage was steeped in Romanticism; Humboldt intended to investigate how the forces of nature interact with one another and find out about the unity of nature. Humboldt returned to Europe in 1804 and was acclaimed as a public hero. The details and findings of Humboldt’s journey were published in his Personal Narrative of Travels to the Equatorial Regions of the New Continent (30 volumes). This Personal Narrative was taken by Charles Darwin on his famous voyage on H.M.S Beagle.[3] Humboldt spent the rest of his life mainly in Europe, although he did embark on a short expedition to Siberia and the Russian steppes in 1829. Humboldt’s last works were contained in his book, Kosmos: Entwurf einer physichen Weltbeschreibung (“Cosmos. Sketch for a Physical Description of the Universe”). The book mainly described development of life-force from the cosmos, but also included the formation of stars from nebular clouds as well as the geography of planets. Alexander von Humboldt died in 1859, while working on the fifth volume of Kosmos.[4]

[edit] Humboldtian science defined

Humboldtian science is a term used to describe not only the extensive work of Alexander von Humboldt, but as a general term for much of the works of 19th century scientists. Susan Cannon is attributed with coining the term ‘Humboldtian science.’[5] According to Cannon, Humboldtian science is, “the accurate, measured study of widespread but interconnected real phenomena in order to find a definite law and a dynamical cause.”[6] Humboldtian science is used now in place of the traditional, “Baconianism,” as a more appropriate and less vague term to refer to themes of 19th century science.[7]

According to Malcom Nicholson, “[Susan Cannon] characterized [Humboldtian science] as synthetic, empirical, quantitative and impossible to fit into any one of our twentieth century disciplinary boundaries.”[8] A central element of Humboldtian science was its use of the latest advances in scientific instrumentation to observe and measure physical variables, while attending to all possible sources of error. Humboldtian science revolved around understanding the relationship between accurate measurement, sources of error and mathematical laws.[9] Cannon identifies four distinctive features that marked Humboldtian science out from previous versions of science . [10]:

  • insistence on accuracy for all scientific instruments and observations
  • a mental sophistication in which theoretical mechanisms and entities of past science were taken lightly
  • a new set of conceptual tools, including isomaps, graphs, and a theory of errors
  • the application of accuracy, mental sophistication and tools not to isolated science in laboratories, but to greatly variable real phenomena.

[edit] Humboldt’s “terrestrial physicist”

Humboldt was committed to what he called ‘terrestrial physics.’ Essentially Humboldt’s new scientific approach required a new type of scientist; Humboldtian science demanded a transition from the naturalist to the physicist. Humboldt described how his idea of terrestrial physics differs from traditional ‘descriptive’ natural history when he stated, “[traveling naturalists] have neglected to track the great and constant laws of nature manifested in the rapid flux of phenomena…and to trace the reciprocal interaction of the divided physical forces.”[11] Humboldt did not consider himself an explorer, but rather a scientific traveler, who accurately measured what explorers had reported inaccurately.[12] According to Humboldt the goal of the terrestrial physicist was to investigate the confluence and interweaving of all physical forces. An incredibly extensive array of precise instrumentation had to be readily available for Humboldt’s terrestrial physicist. The expansive amount of scientific resources that characterized the Humboldtian scientist is best described in the book Science in Culture,

Thus the complete Humboldtian traveller, in order to make satisfactory observations, should be able to cope with everything from the revolution of the satellites of Jupiter to the carelessness of clumsy donkeys.[13]

Just some of such instruments included chronometers, telescopes, sextants, microscopes, magnetic compasses, thermometers, hygrometers, barometers, electrometers, and eudiometers. Furthermore, it was necessary to have multiple makes and models of each specific instrument to compare errors and constancy among each type.[14]

[edit] Humboldt’s equilibrium

One concept that is central to Humboldtian science is that of a general equilibrium of forces. Humboldt, himself, explains, “The general equilibrium which reigns amongst disturbances and apparent turmoil, is the result of infinite number of mechanical forces and chemical attractions balancing each other out.”[15] Equilibrium is derived from an infinite number of forces acting simultaneously and varying globally. In other words, the lawfulness of nature, according to Humboldt, is a result of infinity and complexity. Humboldtian science promotes the idea that the more forces that are accurately measured over more of the earth’s surface results in a greater understanding of the order of nature.[16]

The voyage to the Americas produced many discoveries and developments that help to illustrate Humboldt’s ideas about this equilibrium of forces. Humboldt produced the Tableau physique des Andes (“Physical Profile of the Andes), which aimed at capturing his voyage to the America’s in a single graphic table. Humboldt meant to capture all of the physical forces, from organisms to electricity, in this single table. Among many other complex empirical recordings of elevation-specific data, the table included a detailed biodistribution.[17] This biodistribution mapped the specific distributions of flora and fauna at every elevation level on the mountain.

Humboldt’s study of plants provides an example of the movement of Humboldtian science away from traditional science. Humboldt’s botany also further illustrates the concept of equilibrium and the Humboldtian ideas of the interrelationship of nature’s elements. Although he was concerned with physical features of plants, he was largely focused on the investigation of underlying connections and relations among plant organisms.[18] Humboldt worked for years on developing an understanding of plant distributions and geography. The link between the balancing equilibrium of natural forces and organism distribution is evident when Humboldt states:

As in all other phenomena of the physical universe, so in the distribution of organic beings: amidst the apparent disorder which seems to result from the influence of a multitude of local causes, the unchanging law of nature become evident as soon as one surveys an extensive territory, or uses a mass of facts in which the partial disturbances compensate one another.[19]

The study of vegetation and plant geography arose out of new concerns that emerged with Humboldtian science. These new areas of concern in science included integrative processes, invisible connections, historical development, and natural wholes.[20]

Humboldtian science applied the idea of general equilibrium of forces to the continuities in the history of the generation of the planet. Humboldt saw the history of the earth as a continuous global distribution of such things as heat, vegetation, and rock formations. In order to graphically represent this continuity Humboldt developed isothermal lines, which denoted isotherms.[21] These isothermal lines functioned in the general balancing of forces in that isothermal lines preserved local peculiarities within a general regularity.[22] According to Humboldtian science, nature’s order and equilibria emerged “gradually and progressively from laborious observing, averaging, and mapping over increasingly extended areas.”[23]

[edit] Impact of Humboldtian science

Humboldt succeeded in developing a comprehensive science that joined the separate branches of natural philosophy under a model of natural order founded on the concept of dynamic equilibrium. The work that Humboldt did reached far beyond his personal expeditions and discoveries. Figures from all across the globe participated and his work. Some such participants included French naval officers, East India Company physicians, Russian provincial administrators, Spanish military commanders, and German diplomats. Furthermore, as was aforementioned, Charles Darwin carried a copy of Humboldt’s Personal Narrative aboard H.M.S. Beagle.[24] Humboldt’s projects, particularly those related to natural philosophy, played a significant role in the influx of European money and travelers to Spanish America in increasing numbers in the early 19th century.[25] Edwin Sabine, a British scientist, worked on terrestrial magnetism in a manner that was certainly Humboldtian. Also, another British scientist, George Gabriel Stokes, depended heavily on abstract mathematical measurement to deal with error in a precision instrument; certainly Humboldtian science. Maybe the most prominent figure whose work can be considered representative of Humboldtian science, is geologist Charles Lyell. Despite a lack of emphasis on precise measurement in geology at the time, Lyell insisted on precision in a Humboldtian manner.[26]

The promotion and development of terrestrial physics under Humboldtian science produced not only useful maps and statistics, but allowed both European and Creole societies tools for essentially ‘reimaging’ America.[27] The lasting impact of Humboldtian science is described in Cultures of Natural History, “Humboldtian science illuminates the reorganization of knowledge and disciplines in the early nineteenth century that defined the emergence of natural history out of natural philosophy.”[28]

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Jardine et al., Cultures of Natural History, p. 288
  2. ^ Jardine et al., Cultures of Natural History, p. 288
  3. ^ Cannon, Science in Culture, p. 86
  4. ^ Jardine et al., Cultures of Natural History, p. 288
  5. ^ Nicolson, "Alexander von Humboldt, Humboldtian science, and the origins of the study of vegetation," p. 167
  6. ^ Cannon, Science in Culture, p. 105
  7. ^ Jardine et al., Cultures of Natural History, p. 287
  8. ^ Nicolson, "Alexander von Humboldt, Humboldtian science, and the origins of the study of vegetation," p. 167
  9. ^ Jardine et al., Cultures of Natural History, p. 288
  10. ^ Cannon, Science in Culture, p. 104
  11. ^ Jardine et al., Cultures of Natural History, p. 289
  12. ^ Cannon, Science in Culture, p. 75
  13. ^ Cannon, Science in Culture, p. 76
  14. ^ Jardine et al., Cultures of Natural History, p. 289
  15. ^ Jardine et al., Cultures of Natural History, p. 290
  16. ^ Jardine et al., Cultures of Natural History, p. 291
  17. ^ Jardine et al., Cultures of Natural History, p. 290
  18. ^ Nicolson, "Alexander von Humboldt, Humboldtian science, and the origins of the study of vegetation," p. 175
  19. ^ Jardine et al., Cultures of Natural History, p. 298
  20. ^ Nicolson, "Alexander von Humboldt, Humboldtian science, and the origins of the study of vegetation," p. 176
  21. ^ Jardine et al., Cultures of Natural History, p. 295
  22. ^ Jardine et al., Cultures of Natural History, p. 295
  23. ^ Jardine et al., Cultures of Natural History, p. 298
  24. ^ Jardine et al., Cultures of Natural History, p. 300
  25. ^ Jardine et al., Cultures of Natural History, p. 301
  26. ^ Cannon, Science in Culture, p. 83
  27. ^ Jardine et al., Cultures of Natural History, p. 302
  28. ^ Jardine et al., Cultures of Natural History, p. 304

[edit] References

  • Cannon, Susan Faye. Science in Culture: The Early Victorian Period. Science History Publications. NY. 1978
  • Jardine, N; Secord, J.A.; Spary, A.C. Cultures of Natural History. Cambridge University Press. Cambridge, NY. 1996
  • Nicolson, Malcolm. “Alexander von Humboldt, Humboldtian science, and the origins of the study of vegetation.” History of Science, 25:2. June 1987