Georges Louis Leclerc, Comte de Buffon was the French naturalist
perhaps most responsuble for the rise of European interest in natural history
during the eighteenth century. His massive Histoire naturelle
(36 volumes) set out to organize all that was then known about the natural
world. He was the source of important ideas about the distribution of plants
and animals around the globe, relationships among species, the age of the
earth, the sources of biological variation, and the possibility of evolution.
The numerous illustrations to Buffon's volumes, which began publication
in 1749, became the source of information about the visual appearance of
creatures that inhabited every continent. He argued for an energetic and
graceful style in scientific writing, thereby making his work accessible
to a wide audience in Europe and beyond. Buffon's encyclopedic and empirical
method influenced the gathering of knowledge in numerous fields. He organized
one of the first experiments to prove that lightning was electrical, basing
his metallic lightning rod directly on the work of Benjamin Franklin. Buffon's
mind was capacious, expansive and synthetic. He defined his study as broadly
as possible:
Natural history embraces all the objects the universe presents to us. This prodigious multitude of quadrupeds, birds, fish, insects, plants, minerals, etc., offers to the curiosity of the human mind a vast spectacle, of which the whole is so great that the details are inexhaustible. Buffon resisted the detailed taxonomic classifications of Linnaeus, arguing instead for a natural history that was dynamic and inclusive. While less accurate than more technical researchers, Buffon's approach allowed him to see patterns and systems where others had seen only discrete details. As Director of the Jardin du Roi in Paris, he became the model of the scientific collector, analyzing living, dead, and fossilized organisms in an effort to understand their anatomy, reproduction, classification, and distribution. He transformed the king's garden into a scientifically significant museum and research center. His work made it clear that species were not the same the world over, that the planet was much older than the Biblical account suggested (Buffon thought tens of thousands of years), and that plant and animal species were biologically related in complex ways. Buffon was succeeded in his post at the Jardin du Roi by the Count de Lacepede, who did research on electricity and published The Natural History of Oviparous Quadrupeds and Serpents in 1788, the year Buffon died. Buffon's son was soon to be guillotined by revolutionary forces in France, but Buffon's massive work survived to influence natural historians in Europe and America for over a century. (A.N.) |
| Title page of Histoire naturelle |