“斯特朗赛野兽”:19世纪早期自然史的证词、证据和权威

Bill Jenkins
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摘要

1808年9月,当一种未知的海洋生物被冲上奥克尼群岛的海岸时,爱丁堡的解剖学家约翰·巴克莱(John Barclay)宣布,这是“大海蛇”存在的第一个确凿的科学证据。爱丁堡的沃纳里安自然历史学会和伦敦的外科医生兼解剖学家埃弗拉德·霍姆对目击者的证词和一些保存下来的身体部位进行了检查。与巴克莱的观点相反,霍姆认为这是一条腐烂的姥鲨。巴克莱在很大程度上相信了当地证人的证词,并接受了他们对“野兽”的解释,而霍姆则不相信,而是坚持自己的专家权威,正确地解释了证据。两人都以截然不同的方式利用了保存完好的生物残骸:巴克莱支持目击者的说法,而霍姆则破坏了他们的说法。这两位解剖学家之间的争论不仅告诉了我们很多关于19世纪早期自然历史中证据和证词的用途,而且对证据和权威在科学中所扮演的角色产生了更广泛的共鸣,这些共鸣在今天仍然具有相关性。
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The ‘Stronsay Beast’: testimony, evidence and authority in early early nineteenth-century natural history
When an unknown sea creature was washed ashore on the Orkney Islands in September 1808, the Edinburgh anatomist John Barclay declared that this was the first solid scientific evidence for the existence of the ‘great sea snake’. The testimony of witnesses along with some of its preserved body parts were examined by both the Wernerian Natural History Society in Edinburgh and the surgeon and anatomist Everard Home in London. Contradicting Barclay's opinion, Home identified the creature as a decomposing basking shark. While Barclay took the testimony of the local witnesses largely on trust and accepted their interpretation of the Beast, Home discounted it and instead asserted his own expert authority to correctly interpret the evidence. Both made use of the preserved physical remains of parts of the creature in strikingly different ways: Barclay to support the accounts of the witnesses, Home to undermine them. The debate between the two anatomists has much to tell us about the uses of evidence and testimony in early nineteenth-century natural history, but also has broader resonances for the roles of evidence and authority in science that still remain relevant today.
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