Le Dantec, Félix
Le Dantec, Félix
(b. Plougastel-Daoulas, France, 16 January 1869; d. Paris, France, 6 June 1917)
biology.
Le Dantec, whose father was a naval physician and friend of Ernest Renan, was exceptionally Precocious. He performed brilliantly on the entrance examination for the École Normale Supérieure; during his stay there he was influenced by C. Hermite and J. Tannery, who cultivated his penchant for mathematics. Suddenly attracted to the natural sciences, he made the acquaintance of A. Giard, who, through his unrelenting critical sense, freed Le Dantec from intellectual rigidity. Pasteur appointed him laboratory assistant at the Institute Pasteur in 1888, and sent him first to Laos and then to Brazil, where he founded a laboratory for the study of yellow fever. Le Dantec then gave free rein to the wide-ranging interests of an insatiably curious mind. In 1891 he defended a doctoral thesis on intracellular digestion in the protozoans, followed by numerous scientific and brilliance of his intellect. Although an atheist, Le Dantec was always open to religious discussion. He was appionted lecturer at the University of Lyons in 1893, assistant lecturer in 1899, and full professor of general biology at the Sorbonne in 1908.
Le Dantec’s gifts for generalization bore the mark of his mathematical training. His biological work began with a study of bacteria. He held that their physiological activity could be interpreted in the symbolic terms of a chemical equation and that elemental life was explicable by the existence of a specific substance that was only transmitted through heredity. He thus sought to reconstruct biology in accordance with the precise language of chemistry, eliminating any anthropomorphism. His logic led him to Lamarckian principles of adaptation and to the inheritance of acquired characteristics, which were the basis of his law of functional assimilation. For Le Dantec protoplasm grows by living; life and growth are a single phenomenon. Stasis produces erosion, destruction, and death. Starting from this conception he explained the law of natural selection and considered psychological and social questions. Conscience, he believed, is nonexistent: men are puppets, subject solely to the laws of mechanics.
Le Dantec’s work survives only for its flashes of insight and its clarity. Although he constructed a precarious system based on facts obtained at second hand, his vigorous attacks on anthropomorphism, his passion for truth, his noble character, and his veneration of science explain his being described as a secular saint.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
I. Original Works. Among Le Dantec’s more important works are La matière vivante (Paris, 1895); Théorie nouvelle de la vie (Paris, 1896); La sexualité (Évreux, 1899); L’unité dans l’étre vivant (Paris, 1902); Traité de biologie (Paris, 1903); Science et conscience (Paris, 1908); and La science de la vie (Paris, 1912).
Among his philosophical works are L’athéisme (Paris, 1907); and his last work, Le probléme de la mort et la conscience universelle (Paris, 1917).
II. Secondary Literature. On Le Dantec and his work, see G. Bonnet, La morale de Félix Le Dantec (Poitiers, 1930); C. Pérez, Félix Le Dantec (1918); and E. Rabaud, “Félix Le Dantec,” in Bulletin biologique (1917).
Roger Heim
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
Edward Gordon Craig and Japanese Theatre.
Magazine article from: Asian Theatre Journal; 9/22/2000; ; 700+ words
; Edward Gordon Craig's conception of theatre was stimulated...translated three Korean novels into German. Edward Gordon Craig was born in 1872 in Stevenage, Hertford...Ellen Terry and the theatrical architect Edward William Godwin. He received his first...
|
|
The Correspondence of Edward Gordon Craig and Count Harry Kessler, 1903-1937.(Review)(Brief Article)
Magazine article from: The Modern Language Review; 1/1/1999; ; 700+ words
; The Correspondence of Edward Gordon Craig and Count Harry Kessler, 1903-1937. Ed. by L...pounds sterling] (Overseas); $86 (US). Edward Gordon Craig was undoubtedly the most influential theatre innovator...
|
|
Herkomer's legacy to Craig and the new stagecraft.(Hubert Herkomer, Edward Gordon Craig)(Critical essay)
Magazine article from: Theatre Notebook; 10/1/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...professional theatre was the seventeen-year-old actor Edward Gordon Craig (1872-1966), but more of that later. (3) In...in Bavaria, the now 'von' Herkomer was knighted by Edward VII in 1907. Not bad for the son of immigrants, whose...
|
|
Obituary: Edward Craig
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 1/23/1998; ; 626 words
; ...Oxfordshire 21 January 1998. Edward Anthony Craig adopted the name Edward Carrick in 1928 in an attempt to put a sensible...tyrannical and obsessive artist and stage designer Edward Gordon Craig (himself ne Godwin), who had dominated the...
|
|
First knight and his lady
Magazine article from: The Spectator; 10/18/2008; 700+ words
; ...and the life of her brother, Edward Gordon Craig, could not, aside from their...Similarly, Terry's daughter, Edith Craig, is always 'Edy' as her family...called her, whereas her son, Edward Gordon Craig, is sometimes 'Ted' for the...
|
|
BOOK REVIEWS: Wonders of our green heritage; The Green Fuse by Jerrold Northrop Moore (Antique Collectors' Club: pounds 35).(News)
Newspaper article from: The Birmingham Post (England); 1/27/2007; 700+ words
; ...are surprises. Who would have thought that Edward Gordon Craig, actor, theatre designer, publisher et...century actress Ellen Terry and the architect Edward Godwin. They never married. Craig was very much in the Palmer tradition with...
|
|
A soap opera from earlier times; British theatre.(A Strange Eventful History: The Dramatic Lives of Ellen Terry, Henry Irving and their Remarkable Families)(Book review)
Magazine article from: The Economist (US); 8/30/2008; 700+ words
; ...from Terry's infatuation with Edward Godwin, an architect who dabbled...who became celebrated himself as Edward Gordon Craig, a theatrical visionary who achieved...queen in 1958, when he was 86. Craig had a vision that the future of...
|
|
THE HIDDEN TREASURE OF AMERICAN ACTING
Magazine article from: The Village Voice; 6/21/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...great stage designer and theorist Edward Gordon Craig (1872-1966), who, while the...birthday present from a schoolmate: Craig's The Theatre Advancing. The...dreaming of." He started collecting Craig's works. Even being drafted...
|
|
ALVIN EPSTEIN
Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 1/21/1996; ; 700+ words
; ...birthday, a friend gave me a book by Edward Gordon Craig, Theater Advancing, and I read...what kind of theater I wanted. Craig was a genius and great inventor...went into the Army and kept buying Craig's books and dragging them with...
|
|
It's a Shaw thing
Newspaper article from: The Independent on Sunday; 9/14/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...Irving, and of Ellen's son, Edward Gordon Craig, interlock with a host of other...book - a few dour passages about Craig's visionary design schemes apart...us to see how the minimalism of Gordon Craig, and of his later admirers such...
|
|
Edward Gordon Craig
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
Edward Gordon Craig Edward Gordon Craig (1872-1966) was an important actor, designer, director, and theoretician of the early 20th century European stage. Edward Gordon Craig was born in 1872. He was the son of Edward Godwin, an architect...
|
|
Craig, (Edward Henry) Gordon
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Companion to the Theatre
Craig, (Edward Henry) Gordon (1872–1966), English scene designer and theorist...theatrical library was bought by the French government. His sister, Edith Craig (1869–1947), was an actress and director. From 1911...
|
|
Godwin, Edward William
Book article from: A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture
Godwin, Edward William (1833–86). English architect, designer, and...whom he had two children, one of whom was the theatrical designer Edward Gordon Craig (1872–1966) ), his income was inadequate and he died...
|
|
Craig, Gordon
Book article from: A Dictionary of Twentieth-Century Art
Craig, Gordon (1872–1966). British...critic E. W. Godwin (‘Craig’ was a stage name he adopted...legitimate and illegitimate; one of them, Edward Anthony Craig (1905–1998), was a painter...
|
|
Dame Ellen Alicia Terry
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...during which time she had two children, Edith Craig and Edward Gordon Craig , by E. W. Godwin. In 1878 she joined Sir Henry...manager of the Imperial Theatre, where her son, Edward, designed the sets. She also lectured on Shakespeare...
|