Zoophagous geology: William Buckland and extra-visual scientific observation
- 👤 Speaker: David Allan Feller (Department of History and Philosophy of Science)
- 📅 Date & Time: Tuesday 02 November 2010, 13:10 - 14:00
- 📍 Venue: Entertaining Room, Darwin College
Abstract
Perhaps because his fellow naturalists thought William Buckland’s personal habits a bit ‘showy’ for a professional, important aspects of Buckland’s fieldwork methodology have been labeled ‘eccentric’. The best example of this is Buckland’s zoophagy. Buckland’s eccentric eating habits, which included a vow to sample every member of the animal kingdom. In Buckland’s kitchen, friends could expect to dine on all manner of things, from toasted mice to roasted rhino. Was Buckland’s interesting culinary desires the expression of some greater ‘scientific’ inquiry? In his lectures at Oxford, Buckland taught that the world was ‘ruled by the stomach’ extended from, and so from that philosophy we may begin to look at just what eating had to do with Buckland’s natural history and his theories of the earth’s origin.
Series This talk is part of the Darwin College Humanities and Social Sciences Seminars series.
Included in Lists
- All Talks (aka the CURE list)
- AUB_Cambridge Seminars
- Centre for Health Leadership and Enterprise
- Chris Davis' list
- custom
- Darwin College Humanities and Social Sciences Seminars
- Darwin College Research Talks
- Darwin Lectures and Seminars
- Entertaining Room, Darwin College
- ESRC DTP
- Neurons, Fake News, DNA and your iPhone: The Mathematics of Information
Note: Ex-directory lists are not shown.
![[Talks.cam]](/static/images/talkslogosmall.gif)


Tuesday 02 November 2010, 13:10-14:00