The invention of nature

Alexander von Humboldt's new world

473 pages

English language

Published April 4, 2015

ISBN:
978-0-385-35066-2
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
911240481

View on OpenLibrary

4 stars (7 reviews)

4 editions

fascinating biography

4 stars

Deeply researched biography, following this influential European naturalist doing mostly things you'd expect: heroically adventuring through the Americas, taking the rest of his life to write and influence other scientists and artists and politicians (Goethe, Simon Bolivar, Charles Darwin, and John Muir all get space here), and mostly not worrying about money or relationships. And yet this is well told, and the central thesis rings through that Humboldt's realizations and advocacy about the interconnected global phenomenon of life and distribution of species and ecosystems and colonial practices impact on diversity have all dispersed so thoroughly into our world by those who were his fans that we've nearly forgotten Humboldt. A fine hope for us all.

Interesting!

4 stars

Although I do recommend the book, I can’t say I enjoyed reading all of it. Perhaps that's because the author’s intent is not to write a standard biography, but to explain how Humboldt’s views greatly influenced thinking in his own time and still today.

I found the first half to be much more interesting and involving as we followed Humboldt on his travels around the world, making scientific observations and developing his unique points of view about nature, ecology, history, and politics. The portions of the book where the author pivots toward other figures, showing how they responded to Humboldt’s ideas, were less intriguing to me.

Still, it’s a good read overall, especially if you enjoy historical non-fiction, as I do.

avatar for marretics

rated it

3 stars
avatar for wildenstern@bookwyrm.social

rated it

5 stars
avatar for SpaceCamel

rated it

4 stars

Subjects

  • Scientists
  • Biography
  • Naturalists

Places

  • Germany