systematics V taxonomy

John McNeill johnm at ROM.ON.CA
Fri Sep 6 01:43:05 CDT 2002


Interesting to see that, insofar as the terms are distinguished, the G.G. Simpson distinction provides the basis; in the morning light I remember that his definition of Systematics was " the study of the kinds and diversity (NOT populations) of organisms and of any and all relationships between them", whereas I think I quoted Taxonomy more correctly as " the study of the principles and practice of classification" -- but all still from memory.  John McNeill 
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John McNeill, Director Emeritus, Royal Ontario Museum;
    Honorary Associate ,Royal Botanic Garden, Edinburgh
Mailing address:  Royal Botanic Garden, Edinburgh, EH3 5LR, Scotland, U.K.
Telephone:    +44-131-248-2912;  fax: +44-131-248-2901
Home office:  +44-162-088-0651;  fax: +44-162-088-0342
e-mail: jmcneill at rbge.org.uk (johnm at rom.on.ca is also read)
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>>> Mary Barkworth <Mary at BIOLOGY.USU.EDU> 09/05/02 19:01 PM >>>
My flippant response is that systematics was introduced because taxonomy
was viewed as ancient, archaic and dead and systematics was new,
experimental, more open-minded, and more scientific.  Name changes are
important, particularly in countries where PR dominates.

Having said that, my take is that taxonomy slants towards identifying
groups (taxa) - but in doing so should consider all relevant information
(which requires trying to understand information from many different
fields) whereas systemaics slants more to understanding relationships
and evolutionary processes, again employing and evaluating data from a
wide range of disciplines.  

In other words, I think that there is a difference in intrpretation,
but I like to think of them as reflecting different emphases rather than
different disciplines. 

So now everyone has something to shoot at.  



-----Original Message-----
From: Susan B. Farmer [mailto:sfarmer at GOLDSWORD.COM]
Sent: Thursday, September 05, 2002 3:01 PM
To: TAXACOM at USOBI.ORG
Subject: systematics V taxonomy


Several grad students were sitting around discussing/debating the
differences between systematics and taxonomy.  Are there *really*
any differences, or is the distincting mostly semantic?

Susan, curious in Tennessee
-----
Susan Farmer
sfarmer at goldsword.com
Botany Department, University of Tennessee
http://www.goldsword.com/sfarmer/Trillium




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