Simon Schaffer on humans, apes and Carl Linnaeus
Simon Schaffer on Swedish botanist Carl Linnaeus, who first classified humans among the apes and founded the system by which we classify all the animals on earth.
Simon Schaffer is interested in the human species in general and one member of it in particular. Carl Linnaeus was a Swedish botanist and zoologist who set out the basic structure of how we name and understand life on earth. In doing so he broached the thorny question of where humans should sit among the species of the earth. A hundred years before Darwin he correctly placed us among the apes. Simon examines that relationship to see the things that mark our similarities and our differences. Simon comes face to face with 'Jock', an adult Gorilla at Bristol Zoo and talks to Prof. Robert Foley about human evolution. He also sees how Linnaeus' ideas were used to support racial science. After all if humans were more like apes perhaps some humans were more like apes than others.
Last on
More episodes
Clip
-
The Idea of Cultural Transmission
Duration: 01:39
Broadcasts
- Tue 20 Jan 2015 12:04Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4
- Tue 29 Jan 2019 12:04Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4
Featured in...
Primates—Natural Histories, Monkeys And Apes
A selection of programmes and clips about monkeys and apes.
Learn more with The Open University
Watch the animations and then delve into free related content from The Open University.
Podcast
-
A History of Ideas
Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the work of key philosophers and their theories.