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- Title
Five Kingdoms, More or Less: Robert Whittaker and the Broad Classification of Organisms.
- Authors
Hagen, Joel B.
- Abstract
Robert Whittaker's five-kingdom system was a standard feature of biology textbooks during the last two decades of the twentieth century. Even as its popularity began to wane at the end of the century, vestiges of Whittaker's thinking continued to be found in most textbook accounts of biodiversity. Whittaker's early thinking about kingdoms was strongly shaped by his ecological research, but later versions were also heavily influenced by concepts in cell biology. This historical episode provides insights into important intellectual, institutional, and social changes in biology after World War II. Consideration of the history of Whittaker's contributions to the classification of kingdoms also sheds light on the impact of Cold War politics on science education and educational reforms that continue to shape the presentation of biological topics in introductory textbooks today.
- Subjects
BIOLOGICAL classification; TAXONOMY; WHITTAKER, Robert Harding, 1920-1980; BIODIVERSITY; BIOLOGY textbooks; CYTOLOGY; ECOLOGICAL research; SCIENCE education; COLD War influence; EDUCATION; HISTORY
- Publication
BioScience, 2012, Vol 62, Issue 1, p67
- ISSN
0006-3568
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1525/bio.2012.62.1.11