A Commonplace Book

Home | Authors | Titles | Words | Subjects | Random Quote | Advanced Search | About...


Search Help   |   Advanced Search

American Scientist (Dorit)

 

Pity taxonomy. When it is not being mistaken for the craft of making dead things look alive, the science of naming things seems, in this age of scientific razzle-dazzle, hopelessly old-fashioned.

And yet the act of naming is, in many ways, the fundamental task of our intellect. The world, as William James suggested, appears "a blooming, buzzing confusion." As scientists, our ability to parse that confusion--to group objects into meaningful categories and give those categories names--is both the prerequisite to and the culmination of our understanding of the world. The way we name things, however, inevitably affects how we perceive those things.

-- Robert Dorit By Any Other Name American Scientist March-April 2007.
permalink