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Topic: Dear Google and the American Natural History Museum. Thanks for all the fish (Read 747 times) |
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Hermit
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Prime example of a practically perfect person
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Dear Google and the American Natural History Museum. Thanks for all the fish
« on: 2005-11-23 01:42:02 » |
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Yet more Darwin texts are available and searchable online. Many have long known and loved the website The writings of Charles Darwin on the web run by John van Wyhe, at the British Library, which has virtually all of Darwin’s published books and articles. Many people, even enthusiasts are unaware that Darwin wrote over 100 articles in addition to all his books). Less known, all the volumes of The Correspondance of Charles Darwin are searchable at Google Print a site destined to be one of the very few that has a permanent link on my browser.
Now, as reviewed by [ Eldredge, N. 2005. "Darwin’s Other Books: 'Red' and 'Transmutation' Notebooks, 'Sketch,' 'Essay,' and Natural Selection." Public Library of Science: Biology, 3(11): e382. November 15, 2005 ], Darwin’s early "Red" and "Transmutation" notebooks and a number of manuscripts: the 1842 Sketch, the 1844 Essay, and the massive unpublished book, "Natural Selection" (for which "Origin of Species" was arguably, the "abstract") are all available online at The Darwin Digital Library of Evolution courtesy of the American Natural History Museum.
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With or without religion, you would have good people doing good things and evil people doing evil things. But for good people to do evil things, that takes religion. - Steven Weinberg, 1999
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Blunderov
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"We think in generalities, we live in details"
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Re:Dear Google and the American Natural History Museum. Thanks for all the fish
« Reply #1 on: 2005-11-24 01:43:55 » |
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[Blunderov] Bumped into this: FYI
Feed: Disinformation Title: Darwin Exhibit Makes N.Y. Opening 'This week, a major exhibition on the life and work of Charles Darwin opens at the American Museum of Natural History in New York. The curator of the exhibition talks about the scientist's work.' (NPR audio stream).'
http://www.disinfo.com/site/displayarticle14156.html
or go straight to http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5018222
Best Regards.
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Blunderov
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Posts: 3160 Reputation: 8.30 Rate Blunderov

"We think in generalities, we live in details"
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Re:Dear Google and the American Natural History Museum. Thanks for all the fish
« Reply #2 on: 2005-11-24 17:46:58 » |
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[Blunderov] Further to my previous post.
http://bellaciao.org/en/article.php3?id_article=9298
November Thursday 24th 2005 (17h07) : The Darwin exhibition frightening off corporate sponsors By Nicholas Wapshott in New York An exhibition celebrating the life of Charles Darwin has failed to find a corporate sponsor because American companies are anxious not to take sides in the heated debate between scientists and fundamentalist Christians over the theory of evolution.
The entire $3 million (£1.7 million) cost of Darwin, which opened at the American Museum of Natural History in New York yesterday, is instead being borne by wealthy individuals and private charitable donations.
The failure of American companies to back what until recently would have been considered a mainstream educational exhibition reflects the growing influence of fundamentalist Christians, who are among President George W Bush’s most vocal supporters, over all walks of life in the United States.
While the Darwin exhibition has been unable to find a business backer - unlike previous exhibitions at the museum - the Creationist Museum near Cincinatti, Ohio, which takes literally the Bible’s account of creation, has recently raised $7 million in donations.
The outbreak of corporate cold feet has shocked New York’s intellectuals. "It is a disgrace that large companies should shy away from such an important scientific exhibition," said a trustee of another prominent museum in the city, who was told of the exhibition’s funding problem by a trustee of the AMNH.
"They tried to find corporate sponsors, but everyone backed off."
Creationism is increasingly widely backed in America. A CBS News poll last month found that 51 per cent of Americans reject the theory of evolution, believing instead that God created humans in their present form. Another poll in August found that 38 per cent of Americans think that creationism should be taught in schools, instead of evolution.
In Dover, Pennsylvania, last week, a jury began considering a case brought by parents against a school board that insisted that "intelligent design," which argues that a supernatural force populated the earth, be taught alongside evolution in science classes.
The AMNH is coy about its failure to find corporate money to mount the exhibition, which will tour the US before moving to London’s Natural History Museum in 2009 to mark the bicentenary of Darwin’s birth.
Asked which companies had refused to give money, Gary Zarr, the museum’s marketing director, said he would have to ask those concerned before he could identify them.
Steve Reichl, a press officer for the AMNH, said a list of forthcoming exhibitions was sent to potential sponsors and none wanted to back the Darwin exhibition. He declined to reveal which companies, or how many, had been approached.
The Bank of America previously sponsored a similar exhibition on Leonardo da Vinci and the financial services provider TIAA-CREF funded an Albert Einstein show.
A prominent Metropolitan Museum donor said: "You can understand why the Museum of Natural History might not want to admit such a thing.
"They are concerned about finding corporate funding for exhibitions in the future."
The museum will have to depend more heavily upon the profits of its Darwin-related merchandise to finance the cost of staging the exhibition, including a 12-inch Darwin doll, Darwin finger puppets and, for a $950, a replica of the vessel Beagle, made in China and assembled in Vietnam.
Niles Eldredge, the exhibition’s curator, confirmed that the exhibition was intended to redress the balance in the battle between scientists and creationist Christians being fought across the country.
"This is for the schoolchildren of America," he said. "This is the evidence of evolution."
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/mai...
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