"The situation in biology was particularly complex. Biologists craved the sort of base principles that Newton had developed for physics. Trying to classify life-forms begged the question of what overall purpose you had in mind. The system that was still largely in effect in the early nineteenth century was the “teleological taxonomy” created by Aristotle and refined by the Scholastic philosophers: the “scale of beings” system, which the French called the série, or series, and which is popularly known as the “great chain of being.” As with the medieval system of bodily humors, it was far more complex and useful than its popular stereotype suggests, but it had a serious limitation, which was its teleological basis."
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Non-fiction authors from the United StatesJournalists from the United StatesHistorians from the United StatesCritics from the United StatesPeople from Pennsylvania
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Chapter 4 “The Misplaced Head” (p. 140)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Russell_Shorto
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Russell Shorto
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