0 a person who writes, paints, etc. in the style of naturalism --
1 a person who studies plants and animals --
He takes ideas seriously to the point of treating nineteenth-century naturalists as relevant for our own environmental condition.
Many naturalists were unwilling to see the living world as the product of such a haphazard process.
By the 1840s naturalists were depicting relationships in two dimensions but without the orderly pattern of circles, producing images of relationships similar to geographical maps.
First, it underestimates the naturalist's ability to ground natural proper function ascriptions in the concept of health.
In this sense, then, the naturalist's strategy undermines the dialectical force of the principle when used as a critique of some moral theory.
The naturalist's view of the individual, the family, and the crowd had a logical correspondence in culture and in history itself.
Perhaps this suggests we should be amateur naturalists and not scientists, emphasising differences over similarities.
Further more, rescuing previous texts from oblivion was common practice among many nineteenth-century naturalists.