Trying Leviathan

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出版者:Princeton University Press
作者:D. Graham Burnett
出品人:
页数:304
译者:
出版时间:2007-11-11
价格:GBP 34.95
装帧:Hardcover
isbn号码:9780691129501
丛书系列:
图书标签:
  • 捕鲸
  • Science
  • Animal
  • 政治哲学
  • 托马斯·霍布斯
  • 利维坦
  • 政治理论
  • 社会契约论
  • 政治思想史
  • 西方哲学
  • 现代政治思想
  • 权力
  • 国家
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具体描述

Trying Leviathan isn't just another fish story....[H]is story is riveting, one of those wonderful obscure microcosmic matters. -- Sam Roberts, New York Times

It's science itself that was put on trial in 1818 in a dispute over a $75 inspection fee, as related in this fascinating account...Burnett's look at the trial and its fallout adds a historical dimension to debates caused by science's role in the legal sphere, especially when it introduces new concepts. -- Publishers Weekly

In 1818, in a New York City courtroom, the case of Maurice v. Judd posed an apparently straightforward question: Was whale oil fish oil, and therefore subject to state inspection and taxation? As expert witnesses testified, however, the trial quickly became a passionate public debate on the order of nature and the supremacy of man. In the fascinating Trying Leviathan: The Nineteenth-Century New York Court Case That Put the Whale on Trial and Challenged the Order of Nature, D. Graham Burnett describes the trial, its undercurrents, and its repercussions with sublime wit and consummate skill. -- Anna Mundow, The Boston Globe

At once bewitching and bookish, with a Dickensian cast of characters (including a sea captain named Preserved Fish), Trying Leviathan bristles with insights about the relationships between popular belief, democracy, science and the law that resonate with contemporary controversies over Darwinism and intelligent design. -- Glenn C. Altschuler, New York Observer

When the Catholic Church put Galileo on trial for his heretic views, man's position in the Universe was at stake. When schoolteacher John Scopes entered a Tennessee courtroom in 1925 for violating the state's anti-evolution statute, the issue was man's relationship to the animal kingdom. It's hard to imagine that a case brought by a Manhattan fish-oil inspector against a purveyor of whale oil could end up in similar territory. As D. Graham Burnett's enthralling book demonstrates, it did just that...Burnett curates the abundant quotations with skill and strengthens his thesis with some marvellous contemporary illustrations. His clear writing and delightful detours help build a sense of suspense at the outcome of the trial. All of which makes this serious book an unexpected page-turner. -- Henry Nicholls, Nature

...[Burnett's] perspective on the intellectual and social climate of early-nineteenth-century America makes fascinating reading. The issues raised in Maurice v. Judd have surfaced again and again, right up to present-day battles over the teaching of intelligent design in public schools. -- Natural History

In Trying Leviathan, D. Graham Burnett links the case of Maurice v. Judd to a number of important cultural and social issues, but he consciously avoids depicting the story as a battle between learned men of science and the ignorant masses. Instead, he uses the trial as an epistemological exercise: how could Americans know at the time that whales were not fish? Who had the authority to make such a classification? How does scientific knowledge become conventional wisdom? Burnett's examination of these questions makes for one of the most intellectually rigorous fish stories ever told. -- American Scientist

As D. Graham Burnett notes in his curious new history, Trying Leviathan, ...[t]he vast majority of American not only assumed that a whale was a fish, but were surprised to learn that the question could be debated. ...Burnett describes the trial with the keen eye of an informed courtroom observer... -- Alexander Nazaryan, The Village Voice

In taking Maurice v. Judd and fleshing out the details of the economics, natural history and politics of the day, Burnett offers a fascinating look into the early culture of science. We in the enlightened 21st century may laugh at the scientific ignorance of our forebears. But consider the debate about science in our times when many doubt the overwhelming scientific evidence for evolution, climate change and the age of the Earth. -- David B. Williams, Seattle Times

Is the whale a fish? This seemingly arcane question was at stake in the 1819 New York court case Maurice v. Judd. If the whale was not a fish, its oil would not be subject to the same taxation. But as D. Graham Burnett entertainingly and ably demonstrates, this case was about far more than tax. It turned on questions of taxonomy and classification, giving the scholar insight into the ways the new science of comparative anatomy worked in the public and legal imagination...Burnett's micro-history of the trial offers a careful archaeological study, probing both vested business interests and the relationship between the law and the academy. -- Jerome de Groot, Financial Times

What makes this case so important, the author argues, is that it serves as a vehicle for investigating whales as 'problems of knowledge,' offers a window on the often contentious world of taxonomy, and reveals how the 19th-century public viewed natural history. -- Science News

Burnett has a lot of fun with the trial and notes that it's not only scientists who speak a foreign language. -- Roger Gathman, Austin American Statesman

In Trying Leviathan, D. Graham Burnett provides an account that enlivens further this already energetic historiography. The empirical meat of the book involves a detailed and well-organized reconstruction of the trial of James Maurice (inspector of 'fish oils') versus Samuel Judd (chandler), which was brought before the New York Court of Common Pleas in October 1818. -- Diarmid Finnegan, H-Net Reviews

Burnett's book is a spectacular success . . . and he should be proud of it as such. For those with an antiquarian's taste there are many delicacies to be found in Trying Leviathan. -- Daniel Stewart, International Journal of Maritime History

Trying Leviathan is a truly splendid book. The book is well-written and entirely intelligible to a lay audience. -- Roderick Munday, Justice of the Peace

The book is well organized and fully documented. Burnett's many notes suggest significant research. It will be attractive to historians of many different topics, or sub-fields, which the author explores with much creativity. . . . An extensive bibliography and a generously organized index complete this book. It is a very important contribution to the relationship between science and society in the early years of American nation-building and nationalism. -- Ubiriatan D'Ambrosio, The Pacific Circle

Throughout this brief book, Burnett does a wonderful job re-creating the trial and the trial atmosphere. . . . Trying Leviathan is explicated so clearly that no reader will come away empty-handed. . . . This is a book with broad appeal. -- George O'Har, Technology and Culture

Burnett has given us a splendid example of how to wring the historical juice from a legal case. . . . Burnett enjoys himself in writing this book, and his editors have generously indulged his style (and his footnotes). Readers should settle back and roll with the flourishes, rather than yearn for the sparse, utilitarian narrative of a whaler's log. -- Katharine Anderson, Left History

Burnett offers readers a fascinating episode in the history of early American science, along the way raising questions about both the authority of professional naturalists and the historiography of modern (and especially American) science. -- Kristin Johnson, British Journal for the History of Science

[Trying Leviathan] has valuable lessons for us. It is also a terrific read. -- Arthur M. Shapiro, Reports of the National Center for Science Education

Product Description

In Moby-Dick, Ishmael declares, "Be it known that, waiving all argument, I take the good old fashioned ground that a whale is a fish, and call upon holy Jonah to back me." Few readers today know just how much argument Ishmael is waiving aside. In fact, Melville's antihero here takes sides in one of the great controversies of the early nineteenth century--one that ultimately had to be resolved in the courts of New York City. In Trying Leviathan, D. Graham Burnett recovers the strange story of Maurice v. Judd, an 1818 trial that pitted the new sciences of taxonomy against the then-popular--and biblically sanctioned--view that the whale was a fish. The immediate dispute was mundane: whether whale oil was fish oil and therefore subject to state inspection. But the trial fueled a sensational public debate in which nothing less than the order of nature--and how we know it--was at stake. Burnett vividly recreates the trial, during which a parade of experts--pea-coated whalemen, pompous philosophers, Jacobin lawyers--took the witness stand, brandishing books, drawings, and anatomical reports, and telling tall tales from whaling voyages. Falling in the middle of the century between Linnaeus and Darwin, the trial dramatized a revolutionary period that saw radical transformations in the understanding of the natural world. Out went comfortable biblical categories, and in came new sorting methods based on the minutiae of interior anatomy--and louche details about the sexual behaviors of God's creatures.

When leviathan breached in New York in 1818, this strange beast churned both the natural and social orders--and not everyone would survive.

《寻找巨兽:探寻未知领域的壮丽史诗》 这是一部关于探索、生存与人类精神极限的史诗级作品。故事围绕着一支饱含理想与勇气的探险队展开,他们肩负着一项前所未有的使命:深入人类已知领域之外的广袤未知之地。这片土地充满着未被驯服的自然力量、神秘的地理现象,以及潜藏在深邃地表之下,可能颠覆我们对生命认知的一切。 探险队的成员来自世界各地,他们或是资深的生物学家,渴望揭开隐藏在最极端环境中的生命奇迹;或是技艺精湛的工程师,致力于开发能够应对未知挑战的尖端科技;也或是经验丰富的地质学家,试图解读地球深处古老的秘密。他们中的每个人都怀揣着自己的故事、梦想和恐惧,但共同的目标将他们凝聚在一起——挑战极限,拓展人类认知的边界。 故事的开端,探险队集结了一支由最先进装备支持的队伍,乘坐着一艘能够穿越极端环境的特别设计载具,向着地图上标记的“空白区域”进发。这片区域被描述为一个拥有异常磁场、极端气候变化,以及可能孕育出地球上从未发现过的生物的神秘之地。随着他们逐渐深入,周围的环境变得越来越陌生,也越来越危险。巍峨的山脉,深邃的峡谷,以及那些在科学记录中从未出现过的奇异植被和地貌,无不诉说着这片土地的独特与原始。 探险过程中,他们遭遇了前所未有的挑战。突如其来的极端天气,例如突如其来的暴风雪,能够瞬间冻结一切,又或是毫无预兆的地震,让脚下的土地变得不再稳固。载具的设备开始出现故障,通讯也变得断断续续,迫使他们不得不依靠团队成员的智慧和勇气来克服困难。在一次深入地下洞穴的行动中,他们发现了令人震惊的景象:一种能够自我发光的微生物群落,它们依靠地球内部的热能和化学物质生存,展现出一种与我们所熟知的生命完全不同的生存模式。 随着调查的深入,他们逐渐接触到这片土地上更深层次的秘密。他们发现了一种巨大、复杂且高度适应环境的生物迹象,这种生物似乎是这片未知生态系统的核心,但其真实形态和生存方式却远超他们的想象。这些迹象可能是一些庞大的脚印,一些奇异的鸣叫声,或是那些在极端环境下依然顽强生长的独特植物,它们都暗示着一个远比他们预期的更加宏伟和危险的真相。 探险队中的科学家们对这些发现感到既兴奋又敬畏。他们开始争论这些生命形式是否可能就是传说中那种能够影响整个地球生态系统的“巨兽”,一种能够与地质活动、甚至宇宙力量相互作用的古老存在。这种猜想不仅是对科学认知的一次挑战,也引发了团队内部关于伦理、保护以及人类在自然界中的位置的深刻讨论。 在一次关键的探索行动中,探险队遭遇了最严峻的考验。他们可能在试图接近这些巨兽的栖息地时,意外触发了某种自然机制,或是被误解为威胁。这将是一场关于生存的较量,他们必须运用所有的知识和经验,与这片土地上强大而古老的力量进行周旋。有些人可能会受伤,有些人可能会面临巨大的心理压力,而有些人则会展现出非凡的勇气和牺牲精神。 最终,探险队的成员们必须做出艰难的决定。是继续深入,冒着生命危险去揭开所有秘密,还是在获取了足够多的信息后,带着对这片土地的敬畏和对未知的尊重,安全返回?他们的选择将不仅影响他们自身的命运,也可能深刻地改变人类对生命、对地球,乃至对宇宙的认知。 《寻找巨兽:探寻未知领域的壮丽史诗》是一部充满冒险、科学探索、人性考验和哲学思考的作品。它将读者带入一个充满奇迹和危险的未知世界,让我们跟随探险队的脚步,一同感受发现的喜悦、生存的艰辛,以及人类在面对宏大自然时那份永恒的求知欲和勇气。它不仅仅是一次地理上的探险,更是一次对人类精神边界的深刻探索,提醒着我们,在这个广袤的宇宙中,还有太多太多等待我们去发现和理解的壮丽奇迹。

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