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Wilhelm Haacke
German zoologist

Wilhelm Haacke

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
German zoologist
Places
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Clenze, Lüchow-Dannenberg, Lower Saxony, Germany
Place of death
Lüneburg, Lüneburg, Lower Saxony, Germany
Age
57 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Johann Wilhelm Haacke (August 23, 1855 – December 6, 1912) was a German zoologist born in Clenze, Lower Saxony.

Career

He studied zoology at the University of Jena, earning his doctorate in 1878. Afterwards he worked as an assistant at the Universities of Jena and Kiel. In 1881 he emigrated to New Zealand, and during the following year moved to Australia, where he was director of the Natural History Museum in Adelaide (1882–84).

From 1888 to 1893 he was director of the zoo in Frankfurt-am-Main, and afterwards was a lecturer at Darmstadt University of Technology (until 1897). Later, he worked as a private scholar and grammar school teacher. He died in Lüneburg on December 6, 1912.

Haacke is remembered for research of oviparity in monotremes, and studies involving the morphology of jellyfish and corals. In 1893 he coined the evolutionary term "orthogenesis". He also conducted investigations in the field of animal husbandry.

Evolutionary views

Haacke studied under Ernst Haeckel. He later turned against Haeckel for holding Darwinist views. He was also a critic of August Weismann. He experimented with mice and proposed a system of heredity similar to Gregor Mendel but differed in results. Haacke was a neo-Lamarckian and proponent of the inheritance of acquired characters.

Haacke believed that cells consist of individuals called gemmaria that operate as hereditary units. These consist of even smaller units known as gemmae. He believed these units to explain neo-Lamarckian inheritance. He was a proponent of orthogenesis. He held that from his theory of epimorphism evolution is a directed process tending towards perfection.

Selected writings

He made contributions towards Brehms Tierleben, and with illustrator Wilhelm Kuhnert, published Das Tierleben der Erde. Other noteworthy written efforts include:

  • Die Schöpfung der Tierwelt, (1893)
  • Gestaltung und Vererbung. Eine Entwickelungsmechanik der Organismen, (1893)
  • Die Schöpfung of Menschen und seiner Ideal. Ein Versuch zur Versöhnung zwischen Religion und Wissenschaft, (1895)
  • Aus der Schöpfungswerkstatt, (1897)
  • Grundriss der Entwickelungsmechanik, (1897)
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