Scientific Knowledge and its Social Problems. Jerome R. Ravetz - 1973.

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Scientific Knowledge and its Social Problems. Jerome R. Ravetz - 1973.
We Americans are reluctant to learn a foreign language of our own species, let alone another species. But imagine the possibilities. Imagine the access we would have to different perspectives, the things we might see through other eyes, the wisdom that surrounds us. We don’t have to figure out everything by ourselves: there are intelligences other than our own, teachers all around us. Imagine how much less lonely the world would be.
Robin Wall Kimmerer, Braiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge, and the Teachings of Plants
Maria Sibylla Merian
Maria Sibylla Merian is a German-born naturalist and scientific illustrator from the 17th century.
Maria Sibylla Merian’s journey to Suriname in 1699 was, by any measure, an extraordinary undertaking.
She was a 52 year-old woman, traveling without a male companion, accompanied only by her younger daughter, Dorothea Maria.
Their mission was not to seek fortune or to accompany a husband but to pursue pure scientific inquiry.
At a time when women were largely confined to the domestic sphere and the internal workings of insects were considered evidence of spontaneous generation, her ambition was radical.
She financed the expedition herself, largely from the sale of her paintings and a collection of natural specimens. This financial and intellectual independence was remarkable.
Upon arrival, the tropical world of Suriname opened before her, a dizzying array of colors, forms, and life cycles.
Unlike the male naturalists of her era who often relied on preserved specimens or secondhand accounts, Merian and her daughter immersed themselves in the environment.
They ventured into the fields and forests, observing insects in their natural habitats.
Her working method was meticulous and revolutionary. She would find a plant, note the insects that fed upon it and then collect the specimens, not as dead curiosities but as living processes.
She would raise caterpillars in her home, patiently observing and documenting their metamorphosis into butterflies or moths.
This hands-on approach allowed her to definitively illustrate the specific relationships between predator and host plant, a foundational concept in ecology that would not be formally recognized for centuries.
She saw the ecosystem as a connected whole, depicting the leaf that had been chewed, the caterpillar that did the chewing, the pupa it became, and the final, resplendent butterfly, all on a single page.
Her findings systematically dismantled prevailing superstitions.
She refuted the idea that insects spontaneously generated from mud or decay, providing clear, visual evidence of their complex life cycles.
Her illustrations also recorded the hidden lives of species previously unknown to European science.
She documented the voracious army ants, the intricate nest of a paper wasp, and the stunning metamorphosis of the stunning blue morpho butterfly.
Furthermore, her work was not without a critical social eye. She witnessed the brutal conditions of the enslaved African and Indigenous people on the Dutch plantations and did not remain silent.
In her published writings, she openly condemned the colonial cruelty she observed, connecting the violence of the slave system to the land she was studying.
This moral conviction, woven into her scientific text, adds a profound and often overlooked dimension to her legacy.
After a little under two years, severe illness, likely malaria, forced her return to Amsterdam.
The result of this expedition was her magnum opus, Metamorphosis Insectorum Surinamensium (The Metamorphosis of the Insects of Suriname), published in 1705.
The book was a sensation, not only for its breathtakingly detailed and accurate illustrations but for the new scientific knowledge it contained.
It was a work that appealed to both the scientific community and the popular imagination, bridging art and science in a way few works had before.
© She's So Cool
Maria Sibylla Merian (2 April 1647 – 13 January 1717) was a German entomologist, naturalist and scientific illustrator.
She was one of the earliest European naturalists to document observations about insects directly.
Merian was a descendant of the Frankfurt branch of the Swiss Merian family.
"We teach that the first man was not brutelike nor merely capable of intellectual development, but that God created man in His own image, Gen. 1:26, 27; Eph. 4:24; Col. 3:10, that is, in true knowledge of God and in true righteousness and holiness and endowed with a truly scientific knowledge of nature, Gen. 2:19-23."
Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod
People with negative sentiments about science tend to be overconfident about their scientific knowledge. Click to read the full fact.
hey science nerds of tumblr decode this:
Actinium (1) Nitrogen Titanium Dubnium (1) Iodine Selenium Sulfur Tantalum Boron Lithium Sulfur Hydrogen Moscovium (1) Einsteinium (1) Nitrogen Tantalum Randon (1) Iodine Aluminium (1) Nickel Samarium
Braiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge, and the Teachings of Plants, by Robin Wall Kimmerer
There’s no polite way to tell you that it doesn’t matter what you “believe.”