Albert Wigand
Julius Wilhelm Albert Wigand (April 21, 1821, Treysa – October 22, 1886) was a German botanist.
In 1846 he received his PhD and started lecturing at the University of Marburg. He became director of the Alter Botanischer Garten Marburg in 1861. Being a strict Christian, he was opposed to Charles Darwin's theory of evolution.[1] He advocated creationism and has been described as "strongly anti-Darwinian".[2][3]
Selected publications
- Über Darwin's Hypothese Pangenesis (1870)
- Die Genealogie der Urzellen (1872)
- Der Darwinismus und die Naturforschung Newtons und Cuviers (Darwinism and the Natural Science of Newton and Cuvier, 3 volumes, 1874-1877)
- Der Darwinismus ein Zeichen der Zeit (1878)
- Entstehung und Fermentwirkung der Bkterien (1884)
- Grundsätze aller Naturwissenschaft (1886)
gollark: Quonauts 12: Switch to hexadecimal WHEN?
gollark: you utter bipolar junction transistor :bees:
gollark: Quonauts 11: metal oxide semiconductor field effect transistor.
gollark: Quonauts 11: ts better win.
gollark: Quonauts 11: please ignore the anomalous Unicode.
References
- "Wigand, Albert Julius Wilhelm". Complete Dictionary of Scientific Biography.
- Levit, George S; Meister, Kay; Hoßfeld, Uwe. (2008). Alternative Evolutionary Theories: A Historical Survey. Journal of Bioeconomics 10: 71–96.
- Richards, Robert J. (2005). Ernst Haeckel and the Struggles Over Evolution and Religion. Annals of the History and Philosophy of Biology 10: 89-115.
External links
- "Albert Wigand", Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB) (in German), 42, Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot, 1897, pp. 445–449
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.