Cuvier, Georges

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[[image:Georges_Cuvier.jpg|thumb|Georges Cuvier]]
 
[[image:Georges_Cuvier.jpg|thumb|Georges Cuvier]]
'''Baron Georges Léopold Chrétien Frédéric Dagobert Cuvier''' ([[August 23]] [[1769]] - [[May 13]], [[1832]]) was a [[France|French]] [[natural history|naturalist]] and [[zoology|zoologist]]. He was the elder brother of [[Frédéric Cuvier]] (1773–1838), also a naturalist.
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'''Léopold Chrétien Frédéric Dagobert Cuvier''' (August 23, 1769 - May 13, 1832) was a [[France|French]] naturalist and [[zoology|zoologist]], and one of the most influential science figures in the early nineteenth century. He preferred to be called ''Georges Cuvier'' although it was not his legal name (Hull 1988). He was the elder brother of Frédéric Cuvier (1773 – 1838), also a naturalist.
  
He was born at [[Montbéliard]] (then Mömpelgard in [[Württemberg]]) under the name of Johann Leopold Nicolaus Friedrich Kuefer, and was the son of a retired officer on half-pay belonging to a [[Protestant]] family which had emigrated from the [[Jura mountains]] on the French-Swiss border as a consequence of religious persecution.
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Cuvier was primarily a comparative [[anatomy|anatomist]] and [[paleontology|paleontologist]], and indeed some consider him the founder of comparative anatomy, or of vertebrate paleontology. He established many key concepts:  that extinction was a fact; that different rock strata in the Paris basin held different [[mammal|mammalian]] fauna; that the lower the rock strata, the more different the fossils were from living [[species]]. Although Cuvier did not accept the idea of organic [[evolution]], his findings produced knowledge that would ultimately provide support for the evolutionary theories of [[Charles Darwin]].
  
He early showed a bent towards the investigation of natural phenomena, and was noted for his studious habits and marvelous memory. After spending four years at the [[Academy of Stuttgart]], he accepted the position of tutor in the family of the [[Comte d'Héricy]], who was in the habit of spending the summer near [[Fécamp]]. It thus came about that he made the acquaintance of the agriculturist, [[AH Tessier]], who was then living at Fécamp, and who wrote strongly in favour of his protégé to his friends in [[Paris]] — with the result that Cuvier, after corresponding with the well-known naturalist [[Étienne Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire]], was appointed in [[1795]] assistant to the professor of [[comparative anatomy]] at the ''[[Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle]]''.
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Cuvier believed that animals and plants were unchanging throughout their existence, that the structure and function of animals and plants is narrowly constrained, and that any changes in structure and function would lead to extinction of the species. Further, evidence in the fossil record led him to the view that species could be abruptly extinguished by catastrophes, and that [[speciation|new species]] must be created after catastrophic extinctions, otherwise the earth’s species would disappear over time.
  
The [[Institut de France]] was founded in the same year and he was elected a member. In [[1796]] he began to lecture at the ''[[École Centrale du Pantheon]]'', and at the opening of the National Institute in April, he read his first palaeontological paper, which was subsequently published in [[1800]] under the title ''Mémoires sur les espèces d'éléphants vivants et fossiles''. In [[1798]] was published his first separate work, the ''Tableau élémentaire de l'Histoire naturelle des animaux'', which was an abridgment of his course of lectures at the École du Pantheon, and may be regarded as the foundation and first and general statement of his natural classification of the animal kingdom.
+
Cuvier is also noted for his distinctive division of animals into four great ''embranchements'': Vertebrata, [[Mollusks|Mollusca]], Articulata ([[insect]]s and [[crustacean]]s), and Radiata. Foucault (1966) considered this breaking of the Great Chain of Being into four ''embranchements,'' to be the real revolution in biology, and that in comparison Darwin's subsequent revolution was minor
  
In [[1799]] he succeeded [[Louis-Jean-Marie Daubenton|LJM Daubenton]] as professor of natural history in the ''[[College de France]]'', and in the following year he published the ''Leçons d'anatomie comparée'', a classical work, in the production of which he was assisted by [[André Marie Constant Duméril]] in the first two volumes, and by [[Georges Louis Duvernoy]] in three later ones. In [[1802]] Cuvier became titular professor at the [[Jardin des Plantes]]; and in the same year he was appointed commissary of the Institute to accompany the inspectors general of public instruction. In this latter capacity he visited the south of France; but he was in the early part of [[1803]] chosen perpetual secretary of the National Institute in the department of the physical and natural sciences, and he consequently abandoned the appointment just mentioned and returned to Paris.
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Cuvier’s finding that new species appear suddenly can be taken as grounds to support either of two views: that [[natural selection]] is a creative force operating on a stratum of randomly-produced variation or that it is a natural “weeding-out” process operating on a stratum of abrupt, non-random variation originating from a creator, [[God]]. The first view is that of [[Darwinism|Darwinian]] [[Evolution#Theory of descent with modification|descent with modification]] in which variation is random and natural selection is the creative force in the evolution of major designs and new species, the second view has been held historically and in the present by some who seek after theistic explanations of natural processes.
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Cuvier was famous for his disagreements with two contemporaries, [[Jean-Baptiste Lamarck]] (1744-1829) and [[Etienne Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire]] (1772-1844).
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==Cuvier's life==
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Cuvier was born at Montbéliard, a French-speaking community in the Jura Mountains, not under French jurisdiction, but ruled by the Duke of Württemberg. He was the son of a retired officer on half-pay belonging to a [[Protestant]] family that had emigrated as a consequence of religious persecution.
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Cuvier early showed a bent towards the investigation of natural phenomena, and was noted for his studious habits and marvelous memory. From 1784 to 1788, he went to school at the Carolinian Academy in Stuttgart. After spending four years at the Academy of Stuttgart, Cuvier accepted the position of tutor in the family of the Comte d'Héricy, who was in the habit of spending the summer near Fécamp. It thus came about that he made the acquaintance of the [[agriculture|agriculturist]], A. H. Tessier, who was then living at Fécamp, and who wrote strongly in favor of his protégé to his friends in [[Paris]]—with the result that Cuvier, after corresponding with the well-known naturalist [[Étienne Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire]], was appointed in 1795 assistant to the professor of comparative anatomy at the ''Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle''.
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Within a year of arriving in Paris, Cuvier was elected a member of the Institut de France (Academie des Sciences after 1815), where Geoffory Saint-Hilaire had become a member in 1792. In 1796 Cuvier began to lecture at the ''École Centrale du Pantheon'', and at the opening of the National Institute in April, he read his first paleontological paper, which was subsequently published in 1800 under the title ''Mémoires sur les espèces d'éléphants vivants et fossils.'' In 1798 his first separate work was published, the ''Tableau élémentaire de l'Histoire naturelle des animaux,'' which was an abridgment of his course of lectures at the École du Pantheon and may be regarded as the foundation and first and general statement of his natural [[taxonomy|classification]] of the animal kingdom.
 +
 
 +
In 1799, Cuvier succeeded L. J. M. Daubenton as professor of natural history in the ''College de France'', and in the following year he published the ''Leçons d'anatomie comparée'', in the production of which he was assisted by André Marie Constant Duméril in the first two volumes, and by Georges Louis Duvernoy in three later ones. In 1802, Cuvier became titular professor at the Jardin des Plantes; in the same year, he was appointed commissary of the Institute to accompany the inspectors general of public instruction. In this latter capacity he visited the south of [[France]]. However, in the early part of 1803, Cuvier was made permanent secretary of the Institute, in the department of the physical and natural sciences, and he consequently abandoned the appointment just mentioned and returned to Paris.
 
[[Image:Bolton-cuvier.jpg|thumb|left|250px|]]
 
[[Image:Bolton-cuvier.jpg|thumb|left|250px|]]
He now devoted himself more especially to three lines of inquiry—one dealing with the structure and classification of the [[Mollusca]], the second with the comparative anatomy and systematic arrangement of the fishes, and the third with fossil mammals and reptiles primarily, and secondarily with the [[osteology]] of living forms belonging to the same groups. His papers on the Mollusca began as early as 1792, but most of his memoirs on this branch were published in the ''[[Annales du museum]]'' between 1802 and [[1815]]; they were subsequently collected as ''Mémoires pour servir de l'histoire et a l'anatomie des mollusques'', published in one volume at Paris in 1817.
 
  
In the department of [[fish]]es, Cuvier's researches, begun in [[1801]], finally culminated in the publication of the ''Histoire naturelle des poissons'', which contained descriptions of 5000 species of fishes, and was the joint production of Cuvier and [[A Valenciennes]], its publication (so far as the former was concerned) extending over the years [[1828]] - [[1831]]. The department of palaeontology dealing with the [[Mammal]]ia may be said to have been essentially created and established by Cuvier.
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Cuvier now devoted himself particularly to three lines of inquiry—one dealing with the structure and classification of the [[Mollusks|Mollusca]], the second with the comparative anatomy and systematic arrangement of [[fish]], and the third with [[fossil]] [[mammal]]s and [[reptile]]s primarily, and secondarily with the osteology of living forms belonging to the same groups. His papers on the mollusks began as early as 1792, but most of his memoirs on this branch were published in the ''Annales du museum'' between 1802 and 1815. They were subsequently collected as ''Mémoires pour servir de l'histoire et a l'anatomie des mollusques'', published in one volume at Paris in 1817.
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Cuvier is noted for his division of animals, not into [[vertebrate]]s and [[invertebrate]]s, but into four great ''embranchements'': Vertebrata, [[Mollusks|Mollusca]], Articulata ([[insect]]s and [[crustacean]]s), and Radiata. Foucault (1966) considered this the real revolution in biology, by breaking the Great Chain of Being into four ''embranchements,'' and he felt that Darwin's subsequent revolution was minor in comparison.
  
In this region of investigation he published a long list of memoirs, partly relating to the bones of extinct animals, and partly detailing the results of observations on the skeletons of living animals specially examined with a view of throwing light upon the structure and affinities of the fossil forms. In the second category must be placed a number of papers relating to the osteology of the ''[[Rhinoceros]] Indicus'', the [[tapir]], ''[[Hyrax]] Capensis'', the [[hippopotamus]], the [[sloth]]s, the[[ manatee]], etc. In the former category must be classed an even greater number of memoirs, dealing with the extinct mammals of the [[Eocene]] beds of [[Montmartre]], the fossil species of hippopotamus, the ''[[Didelphys gypsorum]]'', the [[Megalonyx]], the [[Megatherium]], the cave-[[hyena]], the [[pterodactylus|pterodactyl]], the extinct species of [[rhinoceros]], the [[cave bear]], the [[mastodont]], the extinct species of [[elephant]], [[fossil]] species of manatee and [[Seal (mammal)|seals]], fossil forms of [[crocodile|crocodilians]], [[chelonian]]s, fishes, [[bird]]s, etc.
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In the department of [[fish]], Cuvier's research, begun in 1801, culminated in the publication of the ''Histoire naturelle des poissons'', which contained descriptions of five thousand species of fish, and was the joint production of Cuvier and A. Valenciennes. This publication extended over the years 1828 to 1831. The department of [[palaeontology]] dealing with [[mammal]]s may be said to have been essentially created and established by Cuvier.
  
The results of Cuvier's principal palaeontological and geological investigations were ultimately given to the world in the form of two separate works. One of these is the celebrated ''Recherches sur les ossements fossiles de quadrupedes'', published in Paris in [[1812]], with subsequent editions in [[1821]] and [[1825]]; and the other is his ''Discours sur les revolutions de la surface du globe'', published in Paris in 1825.
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In this region of investigation, Cuvier published a long list of manuscripts, partly relating to the bones of extinct animals, and partly detailing the results of observations on the skeletons of living animals, especially examined with a view of throwing light upon the structure of the fossil forms. In the second category were a number of papers relating to the osteology of the ''Rhinoceros Indicus'', the [[tapir]], ''Hyrax Capensis'', the [[hippopotamus]], the [[sloth]], the [[manatee]], and so forth. In the former category, relating to bones of extinct animals, Cuvier published most of his manuscripts, dealing with extinct mammals of the [[Eocene]] beds of Montmartre, the fossil species of hippopotamus, the ''Didelphys gypsorum'', the Megalonyx, the Megatherium, the cave-[[hyena]], the [[pterodactylus|pterodactyl]], the extinct species of [[rhinoceros]], the [[cave bear]], the mastodon, the extinct species of [[elephant]], [[fossil]] species of manatee and seals, fossil forms of crocodilians, chelonians, fishes, [[bird]]s, and so forth.
  
But none of his works attained a higher reputation than his ''Regne animal distribué d'après son organisation'', the first edition of which appeared in four octavo volumes in [[1817]], and the second in five volumes in [[1829]] - [[1830]]. In this classical work Cuvier embodied the results of the whole of his previous researches on the structure of living and fossil animals. The whole of the work was his own, with the exception of the ''[[Insect]]a'', in which he was assisted by his friend [[Pierre André Latreille]].
+
The results of Cuvier's principal paleontological and [[geology|geological]] investigations were ultimately given to the world in the form of two separate works. One of these is the celebrated ''Recherches sur les ossements fossiles de quadrupedes'', published in Paris in 1812, with subsequent editions in 1821 and 1825. The other is his ''Discours sur les revolutions de la surface du globe'', published in Paris in 1825.
  
In 1821, Cuvier made what has been called his "Rash [[Dictum]]": He remarked that it was unlikely for any large, unknown animal to be discovered. Many such discoveries have been made since Cuvier's statement.  
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However, none of Cuvier's works attained a higher reputation than his ''Regne animal distribué d'après son organisation'', the first edition of which appeared in four volumes in 1817, and the second in five volumes in 1829-1830. In this classical work, Cuvier embodied the results of his entire previous research on the structure of living and fossil animals. The work was almost entirely his own, with the exception of the ''[[Insect|Insecta]]'', in which he was assisted by his friend Pierre André Latreille.
  
Apart from his own original investigations in zoology and [[paleontology]] Cuvier carried out a vast amount of work as perpetual secretary of the National Institute, and as an official connected with public education generally; and much of this work appeared ultimately in a published form. Thus, in [[1808]] he was placed by [[Napoleon I of France|Napoleon]] upon the council of the [[Imperial University]], and in this capacity he presided (in the years [[1809]], [[1811]] and [[1813]]) over commissions charged to examine the state of the higher educational establishments in the districts beyond the [[Alps]] and the [[Rhine]] which had been annexed to France, and to report upon the means by which these could be affiliated with the central university. Three separate reports on this subject were published by him.
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Cuvier established many key concepts. He was able to convince his contemporaries that extinction was a fact, and was the first to demonstrate that different rock strata in the Paris basin held different [[mammal|mammalian]] fauna. He also documented that the lower the rock strata, the more different the fossils were from living [[species]]. Although Cuvier did not accept the idea of organic [[evolution]], such findings produced knowledge that would ultimately provide support for the evolutionary theories of [[Charles Darwin]].
  
In his capacity, again, of perpetual secretary of the Institute, he not only prepared a number of ''[[éloges historiques]]'' on deceased members of the Academy of Sciences, but he was the author of a number of reports on the history of the physical and natural sciences, the most important of these being the ''Rapport historique sur le progrès des sciences physiques depuis 1789'', published in [[1810]].
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Cuvier himself was an essentialist, who believed that animals and plants were unchanging throughout their existence. He believed that the structure and function of organisms is narrowly constrained and any changes would result in the extinction of those species. The fossils that Cuvier and his team found in the Paris basin appeared suddenly in the rock strata. He concluded that species were abruptly extinguished by catastrophes, and that [[speciation|new species]] were created after the catastrophic extinctions, otherwise the earth's species would disappear over time.
  
Prior to the fall of Napoleon ([[1814]]) he had been admitted to the council of state, and his position remained unaffected by the restoration of the [[Bourbon house|Bourbons]]. He was elected chancellor of the university, in which capacity he acted as interim president of the council of public instruction, whilst he also, as a [[Lutheran]], superintended the faculty of Protestant theology. In [[1819]] he was appointed president of the committee of the interior, and retained the office until his death.
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In 1821, Cuvier made what has been called his “Rash Dictum”: he remarked that it was unlikely for any large, unknown animal to be discovered. Many such discoveries have been made since Cuvier's statement.  
  
In [[1826]] he was made grand officer of the [[Légion d'honneur|Legion of Honour]]; and in [[1831]] he was raised by [[Louis-Philippe of France|Louis Philippe]] to the rank of [[peer of France]], and was subsequently appointed president of the council of state. In the beginning of 1832 he was nominated to the ministry of the interior, but in May he died in Paris of [[cholera]] after a brief illness.
+
Apart from his own original investigations in [[zoology]] and [[paleontology]], Cuvier carried out a vast amount of work as permanent secretary of the National Institute, and as an official connected with public [[education]] generally, and much of this work appeared ultimately in a published form. In 1808, he was placed by [[Napoleon I of France|Napoleon]] upon the council of the Imperial University, and in this capacity he presided (in the years 1809, 1811, and 1813) over commissions charged to examine the state of the higher educational establishments in the districts beyond the Alps and the Rhine, which had been annexed to France, and to report upon the means by which these could be affiliated with the central university. He published three separate reports on this subject.
 +
 
 +
In his capacity, again, of permanent secretary of the Institute, he not only prepared a number of ''éloges historiques'' on deceased members of the Academy of Sciences, but he was the author of a number of reports on the history of the physical and natural sciences. The most important of these was the ''Rapport historique sur le progrès des sciences physiques depuis 1789'', published in 1810.
 +
 
 +
Prior to the fall of Napoleon (1814), Cuvier had been admitted to the council of state, and his position remained unaffected by the restoration of the Bourbons. He was elected chancellor of the university, in which capacity he acted as interim president of the council of public instruction, while he also, as a [[Lutheran]], supervised the faculty of Protestant theology. In 1819, Cuvier was appointed president of the Committee of the Interior and retained the office until his death.
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In 1826, Cuvier was made grand officer of the Legion of Honour, and in 1831, Louis Philippe elevated him to the rank of "peer of France." He was subsequently appointed president of the council of state. In the beginning of 1832, Cuvier was nominated to the ministry of the interior, but in May, while in Paris, he died of cholera after a brief illness.
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==Disagreements with Lamarck and Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire==
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Cuvier's life as a scientist is also noted for his conflict with two leading scientists of his time, Jean-Baptiste Pierre Antoine de Monet Lamarck and Etienne Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire.
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In the case of [[Lamarck]], Cuvier objected to Lamarck's speculative approach to [[science]], with Cuvier focused on gathering and presenting of facts. He originally tried to ignore Lamarck, but later objected to him in publications and in private. His ''Discours preliminaire sur les revolutions du globe'' repeatedly attacked Lamarck, and in his famous ''Eloge,'' Cuvier attached Lamarck's approach to science (Hull 1988).
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In the case of [[Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire]], originally Cuvier was on good terms, with Geoffory Saint-Hilaire (along with Lamarck) helping to bring him to Paris, and coauthoring papers together. Hull (1988) speculates that contributing to the break between the two was Cuvier's failure to help Geoffory Saint-Hilaire after he was abandoned in [[Egypt]] for some time after having joined [[Napoleon]] in his conquest of Egypt, as well as Cuvier declining to help Saint-Hilaire regain a position in the scientific community when he finally returned to Paris. They soon became professional enemies. Cuvier had the same basic problem with Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire as he did with Lamarck, portraying him as irresponsibly speculative (Hull 1988). In 1830, they had a famous debate before the Academy of Science. This debate has been interpreted post-[[Darwin]] as a debate over [[evolution]], with Cuvier opposing evolution and Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire in favor. But, in reality, it mostly centered on the number of archetypes needed to characterize organisms, with Cuvier holding to four and Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire seeing a single plan. Cuvier's ''Eloge'' on Lamarck also was directed against Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire (Hull 1988).
  
 
== References ==
 
== References ==
* [[Dorinda Outram]], ''Georges Cuvier: Vocation, Science and Authority in Post-Revolutionary France'' (Palgrave Macmillan, 1984)
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* Corsi, P. 2005. ''Rapport historique sur les progrès des sciences naturelles depuis 1789, et sur leur état actuel, présenté à Sa Majesté l'Empereur et Roi, en son Conseil d'État, le 6 février 1808, par la classe des sciences physiques et mathématiques de l'Institut... conformément à l'arrêté du gouvernement du 13 ventôse an X'' (Paris)
* [[Jean Pierre Flourens|PJM Flourens]], ''Eloge historique de G. Cuvier'', published as an introduction to the ''Eloges historiques'' of Cuvier
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* Foucault, M. 1966. ''Les Mots et les Choses: Une Archeologie des Sciences Humaines''. Paris: Gallimard.
* ''Histoire des truvaux de Georges Cuvier'' (3rd ed., Paris, 1858)
+
* de CAndolle, A. P. 1832. ''Mort de G. Cuvier''. Bibliothique universelle.
* [[Augustin Pyrame de Candolle|AP de Candolle]], "''Mort de G. Cuvier''", Bibliothique universelle (1832, 59, p. 442);
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* Hull, D. L. 1988. ''Science as a Process: An Evolutionary Account of the Social and Conceptual Development of Science''. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
* [[CL Laurillard]], "''Cuvier''," Biographie universelle, supp. vol. 61 (1836)
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* Laurillard, C. L. 1836. ''Cuvier''. Biographie universelle, supp. vol. 61.
* [[Sarah Lee]], ''Memoirs of Cuvier'', translated into French by [[T Lacordaire]] (1833)
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* Lee, S. ''1833. Memoirs of Cuvier''. Translated into French by T Lacordaire.
* {{1911}}
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* Outram, D. 1984. ''Georges Cuvier: Vocation, Science and Authority in Post-Revolutionary France.'' Palgrave: Macmillan.
* Pietro Corsi, ''Rapport historique sur les progrès des sciences naturelles depuis 1789, et sur leur état actuel, présenté à Sa Majesté l'Empereur et Roi, en son Conseil d'État, le 6 février 1808, par la classe des sciences physiques et mathématiques de l'Institut... conformément à l'arrêté du gouvernement du 13 ventôse an X'' (Paris, 2005)
 
 
 
  
  
 
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[[Category:Life sciences]]
 
[[Category:Life sciences]]
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[[Category:Biography]]
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[[Category:Paleontology]]
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[[Category:Biologists]]

Latest revision as of 13:42, 29 August 2008

Georges Cuvier

Léopold Chrétien Frédéric Dagobert Cuvier (August 23, 1769 - May 13, 1832) was a French naturalist and zoologist, and one of the most influential science figures in the early nineteenth century. He preferred to be called Georges Cuvier although it was not his legal name (Hull 1988). He was the elder brother of Frédéric Cuvier (1773 – 1838), also a naturalist.

Cuvier was primarily a comparative anatomist and paleontologist, and indeed some consider him the founder of comparative anatomy, or of vertebrate paleontology. He established many key concepts: that extinction was a fact; that different rock strata in the Paris basin held different mammalian fauna; that the lower the rock strata, the more different the fossils were from living species. Although Cuvier did not accept the idea of organic evolution, his findings produced knowledge that would ultimately provide support for the evolutionary theories of Charles Darwin.

Cuvier believed that animals and plants were unchanging throughout their existence, that the structure and function of animals and plants is narrowly constrained, and that any changes in structure and function would lead to extinction of the species. Further, evidence in the fossil record led him to the view that species could be abruptly extinguished by catastrophes, and that new species must be created after catastrophic extinctions, otherwise the earth’s species would disappear over time.

Cuvier is also noted for his distinctive division of animals into four great embranchements: Vertebrata, Mollusca, Articulata (insects and crustaceans), and Radiata. Foucault (1966) considered this breaking of the Great Chain of Being into four embranchements, to be the real revolution in biology, and that in comparison Darwin's subsequent revolution was minor

Cuvier’s finding that new species appear suddenly can be taken as grounds to support either of two views: that natural selection is a creative force operating on a stratum of randomly-produced variation or that it is a natural “weeding-out” process operating on a stratum of abrupt, non-random variation originating from a creator, God. The first view is that of Darwinian descent with modification in which variation is random and natural selection is the creative force in the evolution of major designs and new species, the second view has been held historically and in the present by some who seek after theistic explanations of natural processes.

Cuvier was famous for his disagreements with two contemporaries, Jean-Baptiste Lamarck (1744-1829) and Etienne Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire (1772-1844).

Cuvier's life

Cuvier was born at Montbéliard, a French-speaking community in the Jura Mountains, not under French jurisdiction, but ruled by the Duke of Württemberg. He was the son of a retired officer on half-pay belonging to a Protestant family that had emigrated as a consequence of religious persecution.

Cuvier early showed a bent towards the investigation of natural phenomena, and was noted for his studious habits and marvelous memory. From 1784 to 1788, he went to school at the Carolinian Academy in Stuttgart. After spending four years at the Academy of Stuttgart, Cuvier accepted the position of tutor in the family of the Comte d'Héricy, who was in the habit of spending the summer near Fécamp. It thus came about that he made the acquaintance of the agriculturist, A. H. Tessier, who was then living at Fécamp, and who wrote strongly in favor of his protégé to his friends in Paris—with the result that Cuvier, after corresponding with the well-known naturalist Étienne Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, was appointed in 1795 assistant to the professor of comparative anatomy at the Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle.

Within a year of arriving in Paris, Cuvier was elected a member of the Institut de France (Academie des Sciences after 1815), where Geoffory Saint-Hilaire had become a member in 1792. In 1796 Cuvier began to lecture at the École Centrale du Pantheon, and at the opening of the National Institute in April, he read his first paleontological paper, which was subsequently published in 1800 under the title Mémoires sur les espèces d'éléphants vivants et fossils. In 1798 his first separate work was published, the Tableau élémentaire de l'Histoire naturelle des animaux, which was an abridgment of his course of lectures at the École du Pantheon and may be regarded as the foundation and first and general statement of his natural classification of the animal kingdom.

In 1799, Cuvier succeeded L. J. M. Daubenton as professor of natural history in the College de France, and in the following year he published the Leçons d'anatomie comparée, in the production of which he was assisted by André Marie Constant Duméril in the first two volumes, and by Georges Louis Duvernoy in three later ones. In 1802, Cuvier became titular professor at the Jardin des Plantes; in the same year, he was appointed commissary of the Institute to accompany the inspectors general of public instruction. In this latter capacity he visited the south of France. However, in the early part of 1803, Cuvier was made permanent secretary of the Institute, in the department of the physical and natural sciences, and he consequently abandoned the appointment just mentioned and returned to Paris.

Bolton-cuvier.jpg

Cuvier now devoted himself particularly to three lines of inquiry—one dealing with the structure and classification of the Mollusca, the second with the comparative anatomy and systematic arrangement of fish, and the third with fossil mammals and reptiles primarily, and secondarily with the osteology of living forms belonging to the same groups. His papers on the mollusks began as early as 1792, but most of his memoirs on this branch were published in the Annales du museum between 1802 and 1815. They were subsequently collected as Mémoires pour servir de l'histoire et a l'anatomie des mollusques, published in one volume at Paris in 1817.

Cuvier is noted for his division of animals, not into vertebrates and invertebrates, but into four great embranchements: Vertebrata, Mollusca, Articulata (insects and crustaceans), and Radiata. Foucault (1966) considered this the real revolution in biology, by breaking the Great Chain of Being into four embranchements, and he felt that Darwin's subsequent revolution was minor in comparison.

In the department of fish, Cuvier's research, begun in 1801, culminated in the publication of the Histoire naturelle des poissons, which contained descriptions of five thousand species of fish, and was the joint production of Cuvier and A. Valenciennes. This publication extended over the years 1828 to 1831. The department of palaeontology dealing with mammals may be said to have been essentially created and established by Cuvier.

In this region of investigation, Cuvier published a long list of manuscripts, partly relating to the bones of extinct animals, and partly detailing the results of observations on the skeletons of living animals, especially examined with a view of throwing light upon the structure of the fossil forms. In the second category were a number of papers relating to the osteology of the Rhinoceros Indicus, the tapir, Hyrax Capensis, the hippopotamus, the sloth, the manatee, and so forth. In the former category, relating to bones of extinct animals, Cuvier published most of his manuscripts, dealing with extinct mammals of the Eocene beds of Montmartre, the fossil species of hippopotamus, the Didelphys gypsorum, the Megalonyx, the Megatherium, the cave-hyena, the pterodactyl, the extinct species of rhinoceros, the cave bear, the mastodon, the extinct species of elephant, fossil species of manatee and seals, fossil forms of crocodilians, chelonians, fishes, birds, and so forth.

The results of Cuvier's principal paleontological and geological investigations were ultimately given to the world in the form of two separate works. One of these is the celebrated Recherches sur les ossements fossiles de quadrupedes, published in Paris in 1812, with subsequent editions in 1821 and 1825. The other is his Discours sur les revolutions de la surface du globe, published in Paris in 1825.

However, none of Cuvier's works attained a higher reputation than his Regne animal distribué d'après son organisation, the first edition of which appeared in four volumes in 1817, and the second in five volumes in 1829-1830. In this classical work, Cuvier embodied the results of his entire previous research on the structure of living and fossil animals. The work was almost entirely his own, with the exception of the Insecta, in which he was assisted by his friend Pierre André Latreille.

Cuvier established many key concepts. He was able to convince his contemporaries that extinction was a fact, and was the first to demonstrate that different rock strata in the Paris basin held different mammalian fauna. He also documented that the lower the rock strata, the more different the fossils were from living species. Although Cuvier did not accept the idea of organic evolution, such findings produced knowledge that would ultimately provide support for the evolutionary theories of Charles Darwin.

Cuvier himself was an essentialist, who believed that animals and plants were unchanging throughout their existence. He believed that the structure and function of organisms is narrowly constrained and any changes would result in the extinction of those species. The fossils that Cuvier and his team found in the Paris basin appeared suddenly in the rock strata. He concluded that species were abruptly extinguished by catastrophes, and that new species were created after the catastrophic extinctions, otherwise the earth's species would disappear over time.

In 1821, Cuvier made what has been called his “Rash Dictum”: he remarked that it was unlikely for any large, unknown animal to be discovered. Many such discoveries have been made since Cuvier's statement.

Apart from his own original investigations in zoology and paleontology, Cuvier carried out a vast amount of work as permanent secretary of the National Institute, and as an official connected with public education generally, and much of this work appeared ultimately in a published form. In 1808, he was placed by Napoleon upon the council of the Imperial University, and in this capacity he presided (in the years 1809, 1811, and 1813) over commissions charged to examine the state of the higher educational establishments in the districts beyond the Alps and the Rhine, which had been annexed to France, and to report upon the means by which these could be affiliated with the central university. He published three separate reports on this subject.

In his capacity, again, of permanent secretary of the Institute, he not only prepared a number of éloges historiques on deceased members of the Academy of Sciences, but he was the author of a number of reports on the history of the physical and natural sciences. The most important of these was the Rapport historique sur le progrès des sciences physiques depuis 1789, published in 1810.

Prior to the fall of Napoleon (1814), Cuvier had been admitted to the council of state, and his position remained unaffected by the restoration of the Bourbons. He was elected chancellor of the university, in which capacity he acted as interim president of the council of public instruction, while he also, as a Lutheran, supervised the faculty of Protestant theology. In 1819, Cuvier was appointed president of the Committee of the Interior and retained the office until his death.

In 1826, Cuvier was made grand officer of the Legion of Honour, and in 1831, Louis Philippe elevated him to the rank of "peer of France." He was subsequently appointed president of the council of state. In the beginning of 1832, Cuvier was nominated to the ministry of the interior, but in May, while in Paris, he died of cholera after a brief illness.

Disagreements with Lamarck and Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire

Cuvier's life as a scientist is also noted for his conflict with two leading scientists of his time, Jean-Baptiste Pierre Antoine de Monet Lamarck and Etienne Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire.

In the case of Lamarck, Cuvier objected to Lamarck's speculative approach to science, with Cuvier focused on gathering and presenting of facts. He originally tried to ignore Lamarck, but later objected to him in publications and in private. His Discours preliminaire sur les revolutions du globe repeatedly attacked Lamarck, and in his famous Eloge, Cuvier attached Lamarck's approach to science (Hull 1988).

In the case of Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, originally Cuvier was on good terms, with Geoffory Saint-Hilaire (along with Lamarck) helping to bring him to Paris, and coauthoring papers together. Hull (1988) speculates that contributing to the break between the two was Cuvier's failure to help Geoffory Saint-Hilaire after he was abandoned in Egypt for some time after having joined Napoleon in his conquest of Egypt, as well as Cuvier declining to help Saint-Hilaire regain a position in the scientific community when he finally returned to Paris. They soon became professional enemies. Cuvier had the same basic problem with Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire as he did with Lamarck, portraying him as irresponsibly speculative (Hull 1988). In 1830, they had a famous debate before the Academy of Science. This debate has been interpreted post-Darwin as a debate over evolution, with Cuvier opposing evolution and Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire in favor. But, in reality, it mostly centered on the number of archetypes needed to characterize organisms, with Cuvier holding to four and Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire seeing a single plan. Cuvier's Eloge on Lamarck also was directed against Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire (Hull 1988).

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Corsi, P. 2005. Rapport historique sur les progrès des sciences naturelles depuis 1789, et sur leur état actuel, présenté à Sa Majesté l'Empereur et Roi, en son Conseil d'État, le 6 février 1808, par la classe des sciences physiques et mathématiques de l'Institut... conformément à l'arrêté du gouvernement du 13 ventôse an X (Paris)
  • Foucault, M. 1966. Les Mots et les Choses: Une Archeologie des Sciences Humaines. Paris: Gallimard.
  • de CAndolle, A. P. 1832. Mort de G. Cuvier. Bibliothique universelle.
  • Hull, D. L. 1988. Science as a Process: An Evolutionary Account of the Social and Conceptual Development of Science. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  • Laurillard, C. L. 1836. Cuvier. Biographie universelle, supp. vol. 61.
  • Lee, S. 1833. Memoirs of Cuvier. Translated into French by T Lacordaire.
  • Outram, D. 1984. Georges Cuvier: Vocation, Science and Authority in Post-Revolutionary France. Palgrave: Macmillan.


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