Gaze at Alexander Von Humboldt's 1814 self-portrait and you peer into the eyes of a man who sought to see and understand everything. By this point in his life, at age 45, Humboldt had tutored himself in every branch of science, spent more than five years on a 6,000-mile scientific trek through South America, pioneered new methods for the graphical display of information, set a world mountain-climbing record that stood for 30 years, and established himself as one of the world's most famous scientists, having helped to define many of today's natural sciences.
Humboldt, born in Berlin, is sometimes called the last Renaissance man — he embodied all that was known about the world in his day. He spent the last three decades of his life writing Kosmos, an attempt to provide a scientific account of all aspects of nature. Though unfinished at the time of his death in 1859, the four completed volumes are one of the most ambitious works of science ever published, conveying an extraordinary breadth of understanding.
Throughout his life, Humboldt sought out the world's interconnections. Today knowledge can seem hopelessly fragmented. The sciences and humanities speak different languages, the scientific disciplines frequently seem incommensurable and the university itself often feels more like a multiversity. Against this backdrop, Humboldt represents the aspiration for encompassing order; if only we look deeply enough, we can locate an intricate underlying harmony.
In reflecting on this ambition in Kosmos, Humboldt wrote:
"The principal impulse by which I was directed was the earnest endeavor to comprehend the phenomena of physical objects in their general connection, and to represent nature as one great whole, moved and animated by internal forces."
To understand the entire natural order, however, Humboldt had to pour himself into "special branches of study," without which "all attempts to give a grand and general view of the universe would be nothing more than a vain illusion."
Humboldt's belief in the unity of the cosmos had far-reaching implications for understanding humanity, too. He rejected what he saw as obsolete and pernicious divisions of the world into Old and New. Through his geological, meteorological, and botanical maps he showed that distant parts of the globe can be more like one another than their immediate neighbors. Not surprisingly, when Humboldt surveyed humanity, he was more impressed by the commonalities than the differences. In fact, he was an ardent champion of the freedom of all peoples.
When Humboldt obtained Spanish authorization for his explorations, he did it for reasons very different from those of the Europeans who had first visited the same uncharted lands. Unlike them, he was not primarily interested in exploiting the land and its native peoples for his own personal gain. He saw South America not as booty to be hauled back to Europe, but as a doorway to discovery waiting to be opened. Through it, he would reveal previously unseen relationships between far-flung places and the species that inhabit them.
Another Humboldtian legacy is the appetite for exploration and adventure. In Humboldt's view, the student of the world needs to get out into it, directly encountering its manifold vistas. In effect, Humboldt encouraged scientists to make the world itself a laboratory, employing every sense and instrument at science's disposal to observe, measure and catalog it.
Humboldt communicated this sense of adventure in his writing. Scientists nowadays write in the passive voice, as though disinterested or even disembodied figures do the work of science. Humboldt reminds us, however, that the researcher is one of science's most crucial ingredients. Curiosity is both the spark that makes inquiry possible and the source of the excitement that sustains it. Moreover, omitting the investigator can open the door to forms of irresponsibility and inhumanity that Humboldt deplored.
Beyond his financial support and tutelage of other scientists, including geologist Louis Agassiz and father of organic chemistry Justus von Liebig, Humboldt's greatest gift may be his enduring power to inspire. Of him, the liberator Simon Bolivar wrote, "The real discoverer of South America was Humboldt, since his work was more useful for our people than that of all the conquerors." And Charles Darwin, who described Humboldt as "the greatest scientific traveler who ever lived," said his writings "stirred up in me a burning zeal to add even the most humble contribution to the noble structure of natural science."
Of Humboldt's influence in America, Emerson wrote, "He is one of those wonders of the world who appear from time to time, as if to show us the possibilities of the human mind." Humboldt even powerfully influenced the poetry of Walt Whitman, who kept a copy of Kosmos on his desk for inspiration as he wrote Leaves of Grass. Such examples testify to the power of Humboldt's spirit, which to this day inspires generations of investigators to venture out into the world to uncover its underlying connections.
Richard Gunderman is Professor of Medicine, Liberal Arts, and Philanthropy at IUPUI. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
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