3 resultados para Naturalists

em Archivo Digital para la Docencia y la Investigación - Repositorio Institucional de la Universidad del País Vasco


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Este póster fue presentado en la Summer School on Evolution en Lisboa (15-19 julio de 2013)

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It is not hard to see how two visions of nature are intertwined in Darwin’s Journal of Researches: one vision, the province of romantic authors depicting the sentiments awakened by certain landscapes, the other, the domain of natural scientists describing the world without reference to the aesthetic qualities of the scenery. Nevertheless, analyses of this double perspective in Darwin’s work are relatively rare. Most scholars focus on Darwin, the scientist, and more or less ignore the aesthetic aspects of his work. Perceiving the gradual transformation of Darwin’s world view, however, depends on analyzing the two different modes in which Darwin approached and perceived the world. While one can, on occasion, find commentaries on the beauty of the natural world in Darwin’s early work, the passage of time produces a modification in the naturalist’s manner of perceiving nature. This does not, however, mean that Darwin ceases to find beauty in nature; on the contrary, the disenchantment, in Max Weber’s words, that Darwin’s theory produces should not be understood in a pejorative, but rather in a literal sense. The theory of evolution, in effect, divests nature of its magical character and begins to explain it in terms of natural selection, according it, in the process a new and more intense attraction. In the present work, the metaphysical implications of this new vision of the world are analyzed through the eyes of its discoverer.

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[ES] El presente trabajo examina los principales procedimientos de que se sirve san Ambrosio en la homilía de su «Hexameron» dedicada a los animales acuáticos. Se destacan aquellos desarrollos originales con respecto de su principal modelo, Basilio de Cesarea, en especial las ampliaciones de las caracterizaciones de algunos animales, y se proponen ejemplos de su pervivencia en otros tratadistas medievales. El público diverso a quien se dirigía este sermón de cuaresma explica tanto esas digresiones muchas veces pintorescas como otras más conceptuales, en las que el simbolismo cristiano se apropia de las bases de los naturalistas clásicos, desde Aristóteles a Plinio.