by George Beccaloni
This page contains interesting things related to Wallace which I don't know where else to put!
Remarks About Wallace by the Great and the Good
Thomas Henry Huxley, who was sparing with his compliments, once wrote, “Once in a generation, a Wallace may be found physically, mentally, and morally
qualified to wander unscathed through the tropical wilds of America and of Asia; to form magnificent collections as he wanders; and withal to think out
sagaciously the conclusions suggested by his collections...” [Source: Huxley, T. H. (1863). Evidence as to Man's Place in Nature. London: Williams & Norgate. 159 pp.]
Mahatma Gandhi once said "Civilizations have come and gone, and in spite of all our vaunted progress, I am tempted to ask again and again, ‘To what purpose?’ Wallace, a contemporary of Darwin, has said the same thing. Fifty years of brilliant inventions and discoveries, he has said, have not added one inch to the moral height of mankind." [Source: Tendulkar, D. G. (Ed.). 1960. Mahatma: Life of Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, 2nd edition, Vol. 2. Delhi : Pubs. Div., Min. of Inform. and Broadcasting, Govt. of India: 29]
American philosopher Charles Sanders Peirce ("the father of pragmatism") said about Wallace: "Not quite a typical man of science is Wallace: not a man who observes and studies only because he is eager to learn, because he is conscious that his actual conceptions and theories are inadequate, and he feels a need of being set right; nor yet one of those men who are so dominated by a sense of the tremendous importance of a truth in their possession that they are borne on to propagate it by all means that God and nature have put into their hands--no matter what, so long as it be effective. He is rather a man conscious of superior powers of sound and solid reasoning, which enable him to find paths to great truths that other men could not, and also to put the truth before his fellows with a demonstrative evidence that another man could not bring out; and along with this there is a moral sense, childlike in its candor, manly in its vigor, which will not allow him to approve anything illogical or wrong, though it be upon his own side of a question which stirs the depths of his moral nature. One cannot help entertaining a great esteem for him, even when he is most in earnest and at his isms." [Source: Peirce, C. 1901. The Nation, 72: 36]
Curious Visuals
1) Video showing a recreation of two famous Wallace photos using live bees for his beard!
2) Two Wallace tattoos! CLICK HERE and HERE
4) History of evolution in cartoon form, featuring Wallace of course.
5) An excellent cartoon featuring Wallace as the Boy Wonder.