victor lowe. Alfred North Whitehead: The Man and His Work. Volume 1, 1861–1910. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. 1985. Pp. xi, 351. $27.50

Victor Lowe, Alfred North Whitehead. The man and his work. Volume I (1861-1910) . Baltimore and London: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1986. Pp. xi + 352, £27.00. ISBN 0-8018-2488-5 Victor Lowe with L.B. McHenry, Volume II (1910-1947), ed. J.B. Schneewind, 1990. Pp. xi + 389. ISBN 0-8018-3960-2 Victor Lowe began to study with Whitehead in the late 1920s, and intellectually he stayed there for the rest of his life. He contributed a major survey article to the Schilpp volume on Whitehead’s philosophy in 1941, and became the doyen of Whiteheadians in the pursuance of process studies (on which see §3 below). In the mid-1960s Whitehead’s surviving children encouraged Lowe to start a biography of his hero, and he devoted the majority of his efforts to the task until his death in 1988. When I became his friend in the early 1970s he was deep in the frustration of researching a man who wrote few letters, instructed his widow to destroy his Nachlass , and kept many of his thoughts to himself; and Lowe told me then that he feared the task would not be completed. Sadly his doubts have been justified, for the second volume is a rump; but we still have a fine study overall, one of the best available biographies of a philosopher.


1997 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 19-36 ◽  
Author(s):  
DALE R. CALDER ◽  
LESTER D. STEPHENS

Samuel Fessenden Clarke was the leading specialist on hydroids (phylum Cnidaria) in North America over the last quarter of the nineteenth century. During that period he published taxonomic papers on hydroids from both the Atlantic and Pacific coasts of the continent, from the Gulf of Mexico, and from the eastern Pacific off Central and South America. He also authored a section on hydrozoan biology for “The Riverside Natural History” series. Most of his papers on hydroids were published while he was in his twenties. Clarke described as new 61 nominal species, three nominal genera, and one nominal family, as well as two “varieties” of hydroids. A list of these, and their current taxonomic status, appears in the present work. Clarke consistently provided sound descriptions and locality data for all supposed new species, and drew accurate illustrations of most of them. His research on Hydrozoa, beyond alphataxonomy, was directed towards faunal distributions and the use of hydroid assemblages as biogeographic indicators. In addition to investigations on hydroids, Clarke carried out research on the developmental biology of amphibians and reptiles. His doctoral dissertation at Johns Hopkins University was based on the embryology of the “Spotted Salamander” (=Yellow-spotted Salamander), and he published a major paper on the habits and embryology of the American Alligator. Most of Clarke's career was devoted to academic duties at Williams College, Massachusetts, where he was recognized as a dedicated and inspiring teacher. He served the American Society of Naturalists in various capacities, including a term as its president, was an influential trustee of the Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, and promoted the study of science in American schools.


Author(s):  
Leemon B. McHenry

What kinds of things are events? Battles, explosions, accidents, crashes, rock concerts would be typical examples of events and these would be reinforced in the way we speak about the world. Events or actions function linguistically as verbs and adverbs. Philosophers following Aristotle have claimed that events are dependent on substances such as physical objects and persons. But with the advances of modern physics, some philosophers and physicists have argued that events are the basic entities of reality and what we perceive as physical bodies are just very long events spread out in space-time. In other words, everything turns out to be events. This view, no doubt, radically revises our ordinary common sense view of reality, but as our event theorists argue common sense is out of touch with advancing science. In The Event Universe: The Revisionary Metaphysics of Alfred North Whitehead, Leemon McHenry argues that Whitehead's metaphysics provides a more adequate basis for achieving a unification of physical theory than a traditional substance metaphysics. He investigates the influence of Maxwell's electromagnetic field, Einstein's theory of relativity and quantum mechanics on the development of the ontology of events and compares Whitehead’s theory to his contemporaries, C. D. Broad and Bertrand Russell, as well as another key proponent of this theory, W. V. Quine. In this manner, McHenry defends the naturalized and speculative approach to metaphysics as opposed to analytical and linguistic methods that arose in the 20th century.


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