About This Book
The essay investigates a contested Linnaean insect name by examining the original museum specimen and arguing that apparent discrepancies resulted from wear and misinterpretation rather than nonexistence. It compares the specimen’s characters with classical descriptions, concludes it conforms to a lepidopteran type, and uses the example to critique existing taxonomic schemes. The author advocates for a natural system that accommodates graded relationships and the ramification of characters across groups instead of forcing traits into rigid, single-line categories, and outlines a revised subdivision of lepidoptera while discussing broader methodological and philosophical implications for classification.
About the Author
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