Onychorhynchus coronatus
Well-Known Member
just without the honorifics, which are, in my opinion, superfluous and an odd remnant of days gone by.
Rather like the Duke of Edinburgh or the Queen of England ?
just without the honorifics, which are, in my opinion, superfluous and an odd remnant of days gone by.
Rather like the Duke of Edinburgh or the Queen of England ?
I think this discussion has gone a bit off track...
I'm just enquiring because I wonder how your stance of having anti-colonialist / anti-imperialist beliefs squares up with your support for the British Royal family in other threads?
Having respect for the Royal Family and in particular the Queen and having anti-colonialist beliefs are not mutually-exclusive - you can still respect people who harbour different views to your own.
Either way, I believe the issue at hand in that particular conversation was not my beliefs but your unnuanced criticism of the man the day he passed away.
"As they sailed from Lima towards Guayaquil, Humboldt examined the cold current that hugs the western coast of South America from southern Chile to northern Peru. [...] Years Later, it would be called the Humboldt Current. And though Humboldt was flattered to have it named after him, he also protested. The fishing boys along the coast had known the current for centuries, Humboldt said, all he had done was to have been the first to measure it and to discover that it was cold."
I didn't think it was boring at all, really quite insightful. Especially the first part and just strengthens the arguement for why those past names should be changed.Excuse me for the boring rant, but these thoughts kept going through my head and I think the readers of this thread may be the only ones even slightly interested to hear it.
As for eliminating all honorifics; is there any suggestion, in any language of a vernacular name for Cettia cetti that isn’t based on Cetti?
Good to know there is a possible basis for a new name, but why silk?In German the species is known as Seidensänger, which, if I'm not mistaken, means silk singer or silk warbler (the Dutch "zanger" and German "sänger", while literally meaning singer, also is a rough equivalent of the English "warbler").
Good to know there is a possible basis for a new name, but why silk?
I know that this is from mid-2020, but I still felt it was worth sharing here.
"Amid protests over racism and inequality over the last months, Confederate statues and similar markers across the U.S. have been removed — some quietly, in the middle of the night, and some toppled by crowds. A similar reckoning is happening in the bird world when it comes to eponymous and honorific English common bird names — human names placed on birds, either to honor or memorialize someone.
“They’re essentially verbal statues for birds and the bird community, because these mostly white men were part of a really dark time in our history,” said Jordan Rutter, who is helping lead an initiative with co-founder Gabriel Foley and others in the birding community, called Bird Names for Birds. Rutter has a Master’s degree in ornithology, and has been birding as long as she can remember." The past cannot be changed. The way people thought and behaved in the past cannot be changed. What was acceptable may years ago is not usually acceptable in 2021. In every generation someone tries to change, or destroy history, but history is history, and although some people will come to accept 'new facts' the truth is always out there somewhere! Does changing names or destroying statues really make much difference in the long run?
Reckoning with the Racist Past of Bird Names - The Allegheny Front
Perhaps an English man shouldn't comment on the way Americans name their birds, but out of curiosity I read the pieces about these 6 species. As far as I know none of the men named were enslavers, supremacists or grave robbers, although I am wary of imposing 21st century values on people who have been dead for hundreds of years (how will future generations judge us? Perhaps they will see us as confused and confusing because we spend so much time and effort on complicating trivialities, while neglecting bigger issues).Bewick’s Wren. Forster’s Tern. Gambel’s Quail. Henslow’s Sparrow. Say’s Phoebe. Wilson’s Phalarope. What do these birds have in common? They’re all named for people—for now.
. . . Many birds carry the names of long-dead men, some of whom were not even ornithologists and others who were enslavers, supremacists, or grave robbers.
There is a commen behavior in humans. That they will try to solve the smal and non existing problems first, while ignoring the real problems. Since they take acctuall work and time.Eliminating honorifics will advance neither science nor conservation, which means in an era that is fast becoming one of the great extinctions it is a silly diversion of resources to the point of fiddling while Rome is burning. If these people so interested in this don't divert their efforts to conservation, the problem will begin to solve itself as the species about which they claim to be concerned simply go extinct, one by one.