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“Time, if not space, renders all of us travelers. Cling as we might, we are ultimately compelled to let go of the familiar, to forge affinities with the new, and to sense the approach of the more unfamiliar still. We feel our way. If we are as fortunate as the Blind Traveler, we are given the grace to listen, with equal attention, to the intelligence of winds and the solemnity of silence. To remain, joyfully, awake to the path itself.”
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“Life...is not a simple thread which is only extended in length, it is a large web or rather a network, from interval to interval, casts branches to the side in order to unite with networks of other order.”
― Every Living Thing: The Great and Deadly Race to Know All Life
― Every Living Thing: The Great and Deadly Race to Know All Life
“This was quite the leap, since at the time insects were believed to spontaneously generate.”
― Every Living Thing: The Great and Deadly Race to Know All Life
― Every Living Thing: The Great and Deadly Race to Know All Life
“The burgeoning fossil record also posed another question: When, exactly, does one taxonomic category end and another begin? This problem came to be known as “the boundary paradox,” and it underscored a fundamental incompatibility between evolution and conventional taxonomy. The nested boxes of Linnaeus seem logical when viewed through the lens of fixity, but from the perspective of deep time and continual change their walls become tenuous. For instance, the genus Homo is believed to have descended from the genus Australopithecus. But this implies that at some point in evolution, there must have been at least one generation that straddled both groups, simultaneously belonging to both Australopithecus and Homo. Unlike other entities of reason, such as the fifty United States, it’s exceedingly difficult to declare clear boundaries. In 1957—just one year before the proposed elevation of Linnaeus to type specimen—Huxley proposed new taxonomy aimed at eliminating such quandaries. Why not scrap the nested boxes entirely and build an organizational structure dictated solely by evolution? Organisms descended from a single ancestor could form groups he dubbed clades. The point where evolution divided such groups he called cladogenesis: the birth of a new clade. The discipline would be called cladistics.”
― Every Living Thing: The Great and Deadly Race to Know All Life
― Every Living Thing: The Great and Deadly Race to Know All Life
“En la década de 1730, el significado de la palabra «ciencia» no era el mismo que hoy le damos. Derivada de scientia, vocablo latino que significa «conocimiento», se empleaba de forma laxa como un término general para designar cualquier tipo de maestría adquirida.”
― Todos los seres vivos: La gran carrera por entender la vida en la Tierra
― Todos los seres vivos: La gran carrera por entender la vida en la Tierra
“Los destellos de epifanía llegarían cuando tuvieran que llegar. Mientras tanto, él se dedicaría a deambular entre sus árboles.”
― Todos los seres vivos: La gran carrera por entender la vida en la Tierra
― Todos los seres vivos: La gran carrera por entender la vida en la Tierra





