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Before 1834 The Word “Scientist” Didn’t Exist

IDEAS Posted: June 22, 2020 11:44 am

The word “scientist” first appeared in March 1834, while Darwin was surveying the Falkland Islands on overland expeditions from the HMS Beagle, being no scientist but an explorer, adventurer, observer, and diarist. The word began as a passing joke in The Quarterly Review. The wit who coined it was the English philosopher and Anglican clergyman William Whewell, and the context was a positive, though excruciatingly patronizing, review of a best seller of popular science by the mathematician and physicist Mary Somerville. – New York Review of Books

IDEAS Published: 07.02.20

Read the story in New York Review of Books Published: 07.02.20

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