Louis Figuier
Louis Figuier was a French scientist and writer. He was the nephew of Pierre-Oscar Figuier and professor of chemistry at the École de pharmacie of Montpellier. Louis Figuier was married to French writer Louise Juliette Bouscaren.
Career
Figuier became Doctor of Medicine, agrégé of pharmacology, chemistry and physics and gained his PhD in. Figuier was appointed professor at the École de Pharmacie of Paris after leaving Montpellier. In his research he found himself opposed to Claude Bernard; as a result of this conflict, he abandoned his research to devote himself to popular science. He edited and published a yearbook from 1857 to 1894 – L'Année scientifique et industrielle – in which he compiled an inventory of the scientific discoveries of the year. He was the author of numerous successful works: Les Grandes inventions anciennes et modernes, Le Savant du foyer, La Terre avant le déluge illustrated by Édouard Riou, La Terre et les mers, Les Merveilles de la science.He wrote extensively on the subject of photography, including it in his study on the marvels of nineteenth-century science, and also writing a self-standing book on the subject.
Influenced by Charles Lyell's Geological Evidences of the Antiquity of Man of 1863, the 1867 second edition of La Terre avant le déluge abandoned the Garden of Eden shown in the first edition, and included dramatic illustrations of savage men and women wearing animal skins and wielding stone axes.
Main works
- La Terre avant le déluge, 1863, 2nd. edition 1867
- *English translation, World Before the Deluge, 1865
- *Swedish translation by Carl Hartman, Jorden före syndafloden, 1868, based on the 5th French edition
- , 1866
- Vies des savants illustres du Moyen âge, 1867
- The Vegetable World, 1867
- The Ocean World, 1868
- The Insect World, 1868
- Reptiles and Birds, 1869
- Vies des savants illustres du XVIIe siècle, 1869
- , 1870
- Primitive Man, 1871
- The human race, 1872
- La Photographie, 1889
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