Organization Man
Carl Linnaeus, born 300 years ago, brought order to nature's blooming, buzzing confusion
- By Kennedy Warne
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2007, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 4)
His conception of a vengeful deity didn't help his equanimity. Ever the cataloger, he collated a file of some 200 instances of what he considered divine retribution meted out to errant mortals. Published after his death, Nemesis Divina pictures a fire-and-brimstone deity not unlike cartoonist Gary Larson's caricature of God at his computer, forefinger poised over the SMITE key. The self-doubting Linnaeus never outgrew his dread that the finger was about to fall.
During bouts of melancholy his family was a consolation (he was a devoted father to his seven children, five of whom survived early childhood), as were his pets, especially a guenon monkey called Diana and a raccoon named Sjubb. And he could always turn to his beloved plants for comfort: "I have no time to think of illness, Flora comes hastening with all her beautiful companions."
Such unquenchable joy in nature is one of the most appealing qualities of the man, and one of the reasons Swedes venerate him. This May 23, the annual Linnaeus Day, the streets of Uppsala will ring loudly with tercentennial tributes to the "flower king" of Scandinavia. I hope that the Uppsala cafés will revive the tradition of baking Linnaeus cream cakes, iced with his silhouette, and that there will be a celebratory bottling of Linnaeus liqueur. From my home in antipodean New Zealand—almost as far from Sweden as it is possible to be—I, too, will raise a glass (of aquavit) to the inventor of science's universal language, nature's chief librarian, and, as one of his contemporaries described him, "the most compleat naturalist the world has ever seen."
Vivat Linnaeus!
Kennedy Warne was the founding editor of New Zealand Geographic.
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Comments (4)
The names which Linnaeus published, for zoology, can all be found in the Index Animalium. This Index is also available online, incidentally, through the Smithsonian Institution (search term: "Linnaeus").
Posted by -- on May 5,2009 | 06:30 PM
yes but what did carl linnaeus discover or produce you have not put that in your writing if you have and ive missed will you paste the sentance-paragraha and send it to my email please yours sinncerly lauren davies
Posted by lauren davies on December 8,2007 | 04:54 PM
(This is a continuation of a comment I submitted previously). There is also a point worth mentioning about the "Linnean year" of 1758. This is the earliest date for which names of animals can be attributed. It was Charles Davies Sherborn who decided that the tenth edition of "Sysema Naturae" should be the basis for such recognition. Prior to this, in the nineteenth century, the Linnean year was generally recognized to start no later than the 1766 edition of the "Systema."
Posted by Mathew Louis on November 29,2007 | 05:52 PM
I found this article interesting, maybe somewhat too informal. His description of the races of Homo sapiens would have been worth mentioning (the Oriental race being "melancholy,...avaricious.") Some attempts have been made to catalogue the whole of the animal and plant kingdoms. Charles Davies Sherborn published the unwieldy 'Index Animalium' in the early twentieth century; this is a catalogue of described scientific names from the "Linnean year" of 1758 through 1850. Subsequent, posthumous editions of Linneaus' 'Systema Naturae' were edited by Johann Gmelin.
Posted by Mathew Louis on November 29,2007 | 05:48 PM