heavens resemble a luxuriant garden

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Categories: Comparisons

An example of an analogy in the writing of a scientist:

"This method of viewing the heavens seems to throw them into a new kind of light. They now are seen to resemble a luxuriant garden, which contains the greatest variety of pro­ductions, in different flourishing beds; and one advantage we may at least reap from it is, that we can, as it were, extend the range of our experience to an immense duration. For, to continue the simile I have borrowed from the vegetable kingdom, is it not almost the same thing, whether we live successively to witness the germination, blooming, foliage, fecundity, fading, withering, and corruption of a plant, or whether a vast number of specimens, selected from every stage through which the plant passes in the course of its existence, be brought at once to our view?"

William Herschel

Herschel, W. (1789). XX. Catalogue of a second thousand of new nebulæ and clusters of stars; with a few introductory remarks on the construction of the heavens. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, 79, 212-255. https://doi.org/doi:10.1098/rstl.1789.0021

A similar analogy was used by the Astronomer Royal over two centuries later: life cycles of stars can be inferred like the life cycles of trees.

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[Please be aware that a word may have different nuances, or even a different meaning, according to context.]« Back to Index

Author: Keith

Former school and college science teacher, teacher educator, research supervisor, and research methods lecturer. Emeritus Professor of Science Education at the University of Cambridge.