Joho the Blog
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July 04, 2005
Thanks to alert commenters Katherine Bertolucci and Richard Carter, I spent yesterday morning reading Stephen Jay Gould's The Lying Stones of Marrakech and remembering how much I miss him. What a mind and what a writer! And I admired his political engagement as well. In the essay Katherine points to, Gould finds a marginal change Lamarck made in one of his own books. From that Gould shows how Lamarck's intellectual honesty led him not only to undo his own theory, but to come to a new vision of the role of contingency (history, accidents) in the development of species — a view with much less order, logic and obvious divinity than before. Gould sweeps from the minute to the grand, at every level explaining clearly the scientific, historic and social contexts. The closest I came to knowing him personally is through my sister-in-law who sang in choir with him. But I feel that I know him personally through his writing. It's so sad that he died so young. One passing comment from the book: Gould refers to the New England farmer who has a box of string labeled "Pieces of string too short to keep." [Technorati tag: StephenJayGould] Posted
by D. Weinberger at July 4, 2005 12:46 PM
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Comments
I remember the shoes strings passage, I remember that I loved it too. Do you thing is a tag toward miscellaneus or rather against it ? it's hard to say for me.
Posted by: gianluca | July 4, 2005 06:23 PM
Yeah, I miss him a lot too. Just finished rereading Hedgehog/Fox/M'sPox. Great book.
Posted by: ina | July 4, 2005 06:54 PM
"he died so young."
Depends on your perspective - I count us as lucky to have had him for the extra 20-odd years after his mesothelioma.
on "string too short to use" -
was it a farmer and shoestrings? I remember it as the label for a drawer in the museum, and that it was "string too short to use [for one specified purpose]" - this may be the story behind the story, or it may be my memory failing.
He was on my thesis committee.
(most likely because he couldn't think of a gracious way to say no when asked)
Posted by: Anna Haynes | July 5, 2005 08:33 PM