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Towards a ‘greater degree of integration’: the Society for the Study of Speciation, 1939–41

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 March 2000

JOE CAIN
Affiliation:
Department of Science & Technology Studies, University College London, Gower Street, London, WC1E 6BT, UK

Abstract

Intellectual and professional reforms in evolutionary studies between 1935 and 1950 included substantial expansion, diversification, and realignment of community infrastructure. Theodosius Dobzhansky, Julian Huxley and Alfred Emerson organized the Society for the Study of Speciation at the 1939 AAAS Columbus meeting as one response (among many coming into place) to concerns about ‘isolation’ and ‘lack of contact’ among speciation workers worried about ‘dispersed’ and ‘scattered’ resources in this newly robust ‘borderline’ domain. Simply constructed, the SSS sought neither the radical reorganization of specialities nor the creation of some new discipline. Instead, it was designed to facilitate: to simplify exchange of information and to provide a minimally invasive avenue for connecting disparate researchers. Emerson served as SSS secretary and was its principal agent. After publishing one block of publications, however, the SSS became ‘quiescent’. Anxious to promote his own agenda, Ernst Mayr tried to manoeuvre around Emerson in an effort to revitalize the project. After meeting impediments, he moved his efforts elsewhere. The SSS was too short-lived to merit a claim for major impact within the community; however, it reveals important features of community activity during the synthesis period and stands in contrast to later efforts by George Simpson, Dobzhansky, and Mayr.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2000 British Society for the History of Science

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Footnotes

Many thanks to Rita Dockery, Robert Sloan, Michael Ruse and John Beatty for advice and to the staffs of the American Philosophical Society Library (Philadelphia), the Woodson Research Center at Rice University (Houston) and the Harvard University Libraries for their considerable assistance. Some of this research was made possible with travel funds from the University College London Graduate School.