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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 5 page paper outlines the work and achievements of these three men that focus on the logical organisation of information and the ability to classify information into logical groups. The bibliography cites 4 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: TS14_TEmendel.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
discovering and analysing aspects of the world around us then we can see how each of them undertakes this in a way compliant with what they believe to be true.
If we look at the works of Carolus Linnaeus, Demitri I, Mendeleev and Leonhard Euler. Carolus Linnaeus is also known as Carl Linnaeus looked at the world of nature. His
achievement was a method of ordering living organisms and then classify them all within larger categories (Lindroth, 1983). Prior to this each organism was know by its name only, and
as a result there were many names for organisms that were similar or the same. There had been a system put in place by John Ray, but the system of
classification devised by Linnaeus was much easier to use. However, even with this logical categorisation of the species it was still the ardent believe of Linnaeus that there was not
such a process of evolution and that all of the organisms that he was classifying had been created n their current fashion by God (Lindroth, 1983). The manner of the
classification is interesting as well as revolutionary for the time. He bases his ideas on looking at the reproductive organs of the different organisms categorising by way of number and
arrangement of these features (Koerner, 1999). For example when categorising a plant it was by reference to the stamens and the pistils ( the male and female reproductive organs), the
results were also seen as controversial at the time (Koerner, 1999). One example of this was the Class Monoecia within which there were plants that had both male and female
plants on the same plant, firs and even cypresses (Koerner, 1999). The plants that did not have any visible sexual organs were classified as Class Cryptogamia, which also meant "plants
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