Paul Lawrence Farber
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Paul Lawrence Farber (March 7, 1944 - November 28, 2021) was a professor of the history of science at the
Oregon State University Oregon State University (OSU) is a public land-grant, research university in Corvallis, Oregon. OSU offers more than 200 undergraduate-degree programs along with a variety of graduate and doctoral degrees. It has the 10th largest engineering c ...
. He wrote or edited eight books about the history of science as well as dozens of articles. He was an elected fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Farber was born in New York City, his mother born to Jewish immigrants from Ukraine and his father born in a family of Latvian Jews. Farber grew up in Manhattan and then Uniontown, Pennsylvania. He took an interest in science and philosophy, tinkering with rockets and reading on science. He became interested in biology after attending a summer NSF school in Syracuse while in high school and joined the University of Pittsburgh in 1961, intending to study mecicine, but after receiving a BS in zoology in 1965 he shifted to philosophy and the history of science at Indiana University. His master's thesis in 1968 was on "Buffon and Newton's Science", and his PhD in 1970 was on "Buffon's Concept of Species." He joined Oregon State University in 1970 and contributed works on the history of ornithology, species concepts, race, and ethics. In 2010, he was elected president of the
History of Science Society The History of Science Society (HSS) is the primary professional society for the academic study of the history of science. It was founded in 1924 by George Sarton, David Eugene Smith, and Lawrence Joseph Henderson, primarily to support the publi ...
. Oregon State University's special collections hold Farber's personal papers.


Books

* ''The Emergence of Ornithology as a Scientific Discipline, 1760-1850''. (Dordrecht: D. Reidel Publishing Co. 1982) * (as editor with Margaret J. Osler) ''Religion, Science, and Worldview: Essays in Honor of Richard S. Westfall''. (Cambridge, England; New York, NY: Cambridge University Press 1985) ; * (coauthored with Mix, Michael C. and King, Keith I.) ''Biology: The Network of Life''. (New York, NY: Harper Collins Publishers 1992.) * '' Finding Order in Nature: The Naturalist Tradition from Linnaeus to
E. O. Wilson Edward Osborne Wilson (June 10, 1929 – December 26, 2021) was an American biologist, naturalist, entomologist and writer. According to David Attenborough, Wilson was the world's leading expert in his specialty of myrmecology, the study of an ...
''. Baltimore, MD: The Johns Hopkins University Press 1994. ; * ''Discovering Birds: The Emergence of Ornithology as a Scientific Discipline, 1760-1850''. (Baltimore, MD: The Johns Hopkins University Press 1997)
''The Temptations of Evolutionary Ethics''
(Berkeley, CA: University of California Press 1998) * (coauthored with Cravens, Hamilton) ''Race and Science: Scientific Challenges to Racism in Modern America''. (Corvallis, OR: Oregon State University Press 2009); Hamilton Cravens (1938–2015) was a professor of history at Iowa State University for 42 years. * ''Mixing Races: From Scientific Racism to Modern Evolutionary Ideas''. (Baltimore, Md: The Johns Hopkins University Press 2011)


References


External links


Paul Lawrence Farber's website
at the
Oregon State University Oregon State University (OSU) is a public land-grant, research university in Corvallis, Oregon. OSU offers more than 200 undergraduate-degree programs along with a variety of graduate and doctoral degrees. It has the 10th largest engineering c ...
.
Index for the papers of Paul Lawrence Farber
at
Oregon State University Oregon State University (OSU) is a public land-grant, research university in Corvallis, Oregon. OSU offers more than 200 undergraduate-degree programs along with a variety of graduate and doctoral degrees. It has the 10th largest engineering c ...
.
Paul Farber Oral History Interview
1944 births 2021 deaths 21st-century American historians American male non-fiction writers Oregon State University faculty Indiana University alumni Fellows of the American Association for the Advancement of Science Place of birth missing 21st-century American male writers American people of Ukrainian-Jewish descent American people of Latvian-Jewish descent Academics from New York City {{US-historian-stub