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Naming Nature

Reading Time:2 minutes
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Naming Nature by Carol Kaesuk Yoon W.W. Norton HK$136

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In 18th-century Europe, it was all the rage to collect new discoveries from the natural world, from butterflies and beetles to plants and fish. But how to name these creatures, flooding into Europe in ships returning from far longitudes?

With no standard naming system, things got chaotic: one collector made up a 30-word name for a single species of plant. Imagine studying a textbook full of those.

Into this chaos, history delivered the right man at the right time. He was Carolus Linnaeus, a remarkable Swede with 'turbocharged perceptions' of the natural world - as author Carol Kaesuk Yoon writes in her highly readable Naming Nature. Linnaeus could look at a new plant or animal, refer quickly to his astonishing memory, and rapidly catalogue the item on one of the myriad branches of the tree of life that he invented in his 20s - giving it one of the two-word 'Latin binomial' names we still use today: Homo sapiens (Genus-species).

By the time Yoon gets to this stage in Naming Nature, she has the reader's full attention. Yoon, a New York Times writer with a PhD in ecology and evolutionary biology, has a masterful eye for colour, story and structure, and an ear for fun.

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Humans, she argues, have a natural need to name plants and animals, to make sense of the world we live in - 'one of the ... irrepressible functions of being a human being, of being alive'. This is driven by our umwelt, a German term used in biology to denote how an animal perceives the world: dogs by smell, bees by ultraviolet light, humans mainly by eyesight.

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