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The Science of Weather and the Nature of Science

a day ago
  • #Meteorology
  • #Jean-Baptiste Lamarck
  • #History of Science
  • Jean-Baptiste Lamarck pioneered cloud classification in 1777, dividing clouds into five types using French terms to make meteorology accessible to non-scholars, unlike Luke Howard's later Latin-based system.
  • Lamarck published meteorological yearbooks from 1799, forecasting weather based on lunar gravitational effects ('atmospheric tides') and encouraging public participation by inviting readers to annotate and return their copies.
  • He viewed science as intimate and participatory, emphasizing the observer's sensory and emotional engagement with weather phenomena like storms, which he described lyrically as beautiful spectacles.
  • Lamarck's work faced opposition from colleagues like Pierre-Simon Laplace, who dismissed his probabilistic forecasts as unscientific astrology, reflecting a deeper conflict between deterministic and non-deterministic worldviews.
  • In 1800, Lamarck helped establish the world's first national weather bureau under Minister Jean-Antoine Chaptal, but it was short-lived, dismantled after Chaptal's resignation and replaced under Laplace's influence.
  • Napoleon eventually banned Lamarck's meteorological publications in 1809, seeing his materialist, participatory science as politically subversive, despite Lamarck's focus on nature studies.
  • Lamarck's legacy influenced later meteorologists, like Charles Martins in 1848, who revived his participatory approach and contributed to the founding of Météo-France.