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The Man Who Found the Missing Link: Eugine Dubois and His Lifelong Quest to Prove Darwin Right [Hardcover]

Pat Shipman (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)


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Book Description

January 11, 2001 068485581X 978-0684855813 1
Eugene Dubois was born on January 28, 1858, an interesting between-time in science. It was some eighteen months after the first Neanderthal skeleton was found in Germany and a little more than a year before Charles Darwin published "The Origin of Species" in England. Believing that a powerful truth must lie in Darwin's deceptively simple ideas, Dubois -- a brilliant young Dutch physician and anatomist -- vowed to discover it. There is a link, he declared, a link as yet unknown, between apes and Man. Finding it would be the greatest scientific discovery ever, and the name Eugene Dubois would be remembered.

The Dubois family motto, "Recte et fortiter," means straight and strong, and Dubois lived it to the letter. He willfully abandoned his home and promising career at the University of Amsterdam to drag his wife and baby daughter halfway around the world to search the Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia) for the legendary missing link. After five years, two weeks, and three days of life-threatening work, Dubois' excavations yielded the missing link. It was a form he called "Pithecanthropus erectus," a heavily fossilized skullcap, tooth, and femur (thigh bone) of an ape-man the like of which the world had never seen.

Barely surviving a harrowing sea journey during which the precious fossils were nearly lost, Dubois arrived in Europe triumphant in having accomplished the impossible. But instead of the praise and admiration he had dreamed of, he was greeted with skepticism and debate. His finds were too surprising, his techniques and analysis too new, his conclusions too sweeping to be easily accepted. Refusing to yield to his detractors, Dubois battled well past the turn of thecentury to convince his scientific colleagues of the true nature and value of his find. His solitary crusade cost him dearly -- the love of his wife, the trust of his best friend, the support of his closest professional associates, the legacy of respect he risked everything to achieve. On December 16, 1940, he died, alone, bitter, and misunderstood.

Drawing on Dubois' personal archives, to which she has had unprecedented access, Pat Shipman sets the historic and scientific record right in this dramatic and moving biography. In her revisionist view, Dubois is the unrecognized father of modern paleoanthropology (the science of human origins and evolution), one of the greatest discoverers of human origins. He was much more than just a fossil-finder; he was a scientist of genius.

It takes a brilliant writer to elucidate a brilliant mind, and Pat Shipman -- long hailed as a stellar narrator of the drama of scientific understanding -- here shines as never before. "The Man Who Found the Missing Link" is an irresistible tale of adventure, scientific daring, tragic disappointments, and a strange and enduring love -- and it is true.



Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Like many scientists of his generation, Eugene Dubois (1858-1940) was devoted to the ideas of Charles Darwin. He was also profoundly ambitious, seeking not only to establish incontrovertible proof of human evolution from some apelike ancestor--and thus reinforce Darwin's theories--but also to earn a place for himself at the head of modern scholarship.

Logic dictated that the remains of apelike ancestors would be found in the tropics, writes Pat Shipman in her thoughtful biography of Dubois. And such fossils had indeed been turning up throughout the Dutch East Indies, to which Dubois traveled in 1887. There, he conducted a rigorous campaign of excavations, which yielded fruit four years later with the discovery of fragmentary remains of a creature that he called Pithecanthropus erectus, the "upright-standing apeman" who constituted a missing link between modern humans and their distant ancestors.

Dubois's discovery met with controversy on a number of fronts, and on his return to Europe he complicated matters by refusing to allow other scholars to examine his fossil collection. Irascible, competitive, and more than a little paranoid, Dubois managed to alienate even would-be allies, and thus to distance himself from the scientific community. Effectively self-ostracized, Dubois was deprived of the honors and appointments he had striven for. Though Shipman's arguments sometimes seem overwrought, she nevertheless helps rehabilitate the reputation of this "underestimated man" by pointing to Dubois's many contributions to evolutionary theory. --Gregory McNamee

From Publishers Weekly

Dutch scientist Eug ne Dubois is not nearly as well known as his most important scientific contribution. Dubois's 1892 archeological expedition found the first fossil evidence of Pithecanthropus erectus (what we know today as Homo erectus) or Java man. At the time of its discovery, P. erectus was viewed by many scientists as the evolutionary link between the great apes and humans. In a masterful biography with the narrative craftsmanship of good fiction, Shipman, an anthropology professor at Penn State and author of Taking Wing (a finalist for the L.A. Times Book Award), demonstrates how Dubois was driven by his ambition and by university politics to leave his placid life as a professor in Amsterdam and move to the East Indies in search of a fossil that would confirm Darwin's theory of human evolution. Shipman depicts Dubois as a troubled genius who consistently put his own desires ahead of his family's needs. In addition, Shipman reveals much of the politics that often swirl around important and controversial scientific discoveries; for example, the dominant thinking of the time dismissed evolution as folly and marked Dubois as a reckless romantic hell-bent on his unpopular mission. Even while using the unorthodox (in nonfiction) techniques of re-created dialogue and interior monologue (both of which appear supported by voluminous research and add to the book's drama), Shipman proves herself a virtuoso of the scientific biography. 64 b & w photos. (Jan. 11) Forecast: This title is nicely complemented by Java Man (Forecasts, Oct. 30), which tells how two scientists discovered that Java man was not a precursor of Homo sapiens but another species co-existing with modern humans. Nonscientists who enjoyed Java Man will also want to read top science writer Shipman's outstanding account of the original Java man discovery. Dual shelving of these two titles may increase sales of both.
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 515 pages
  • Publisher: Simon & Schuster; 1 edition (January 11, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 068485581X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0684855813
  • Product Dimensions: 9.6 x 6.4 x 1.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.8 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #207,723 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Spotlight on an Obscure, Important Scientist, February 14, 2001
This review is from: The Man Who Found the Missing Link: Eugine Dubois and His Lifelong Quest to Prove Darwin Right (Hardcover)
Everyone knows that there is still religious (not scientific) opposition to the Theory of Evolution, but when it was unveiled, there was strong scientific opposition as well, which only decreased as more (and younger) scientists grew to accept the powerful explicatory capacities of the theory. The most unacceptable part of the theory was that humans themselves had evolved from some previous ape-like form. Scientific opposition to this idea started crumbling when the "Missing Link" between humans and their obviously non-human forebears was found. Eugéne Dubois was the man who found it, and his story has never been fully told. Now, in _The Man Who Found the Missing Link: Eugéne Dubois and His Lifelong Quest to Prove Darwin Right_ (Simon and Schuster), Pat Shipman has written an exciting biography of a neglected genius, and has given a narrative that tells how paleontology was done in his times, as well as how his ideas eventually became accepted within the scientific world.

The word "lifelong" in the subtitle of the book is almost literally true. Inspired by learning about the Theory of Evolution as a boy, Dubois learned that transitional forms between ape-like creatures and humans were hypothesized but had not yet been found. The boy realized that finding such a specimen would be possibly the greatest scientific discovery ever, and astonishingly, he was convinced that he was going to be the one to do it. With this in mind, he entered medical school and engineered an assignment as a physician in the Dutch East Indies, for it was there his research told him the missing link would most likely be found. Shipman's account of the prospecting years is exciting. Dubois took his family to the islands, he survived cave-ins, malaria, and government neglect, and he identified thousands of mammalian fossils, including in 1891 a molar, skull, and thigh-bone of the missing link. His Java Man (which he classified as _Pithecanthropus erectus_) had a small brain, a flat forehead, and a leg made for upright walking. To Shipman's credit, she illuminates well the sadder aspects of the man and his subsequent story with equal detail. Dubois was brilliant and tenacious, but he experienced real betrayals in his scientific life that consumed him. He had a lifetime that was hard enough. His beloved father died while Dubois was prospecting in Java, and never learned of Dubois's spectacular success. When Dubois brought the specimens home, the reaction of his mother was, "But, boy, what use is it?" As the finder of the first link between humans and non-human ancestors, Dubois was necessarily the lightning rod for attacks from the clergy and the public. Also, the old-guard scientists who had not accepted evolution found or imagined reasons to disagree with Dubois's discoveries. He felt himself so ill-treated that he locked up his fabulous specimens for decades, provoking an international scientific protest when he would let no one else examine them.

Shipman has written about evolutionary subjects before, most notably _Taking Wing_, an excellent book about the evolution of bird flight. She has had access to Dubois's personal archives which no one previously had examined. She has produced a remarkably interesting volume about an extraordinary individual with huge flaws and huge capabilities. He was, after all, the father of paleoanthropology. The story of Dubois's boldly making good on a boyhood promise to himself to find the missing link is inspiring, and if he continues to be an underestimated figure in evolutionary histories, it will be despite this dramatic biography.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars good to learn more about dubois, November 9, 2003
By 
G. B. Talovich (Wulai, Taiwan, ROC) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Man Who Found the Missing Link: Eugine Dubois and His Lifelong Quest to Prove Darwin Right (Hardcover)
Many thanks to Pat Shipman for bringing alive this strange man who lurks around the edges of the story of evolution, jealously hiding his treasure trove of bones. He is one of those characters who always shows up, but you never had a chance to meet.

Just as skilled paleontologists reconstruct long-dead animals from a bone here, a tooth there, Shipman resurrects Dubois from a note here, a letter there. Of course much of this we have to accept on faith: we have no more solid proof that Dubois's behavior in many cases was just as Shipman has recreated it. But without her leaps of judgment, this book would be very dull, very scanty reading. Parts of the book are slow as we examine the ins and outs of old controversies and theories, but this detail is important for us to understand Duboi's character and work. Slog on through, but remember that Dubois was kicking and screaming into his eighties, so the book does go on. Maybe just as well we did not digress into the Taung baby and other contemporary discoveries.

I have read other books by Shipman, so it came as no surprise to me that the book was meticulously researched, informative, and enjoyable to read. However, I hope I never again have to read a book written almost entirely in the present tense. Shipman is a good enough author that she does not have to resort to such a tiresome gimmick to bring immediacy to her scenes.

Professor Shipman, if you are out there in front of the computer screen, please keep typing, I am looking forward to your next book. But please do remember how interesting the tenses of the English language are.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A great story, beautifully told, but with odd balance., May 17, 2001
By 
J. P. Rushton "Prof" (University of Western Ontario) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Man Who Found the Missing Link: Eugine Dubois and His Lifelong Quest to Prove Darwin Right (Hardcover)
The sentences in this book have been so elegantly crafted that they flowed like a smooth running brook. Since my wife and I like to alternate reading chapters from anthropology adventure stories out loud to each other, we were captivated by the editorial polishing that allowed us to pick up speed with nary a fumble (except for the occasional technical, Dutch or Indonesian words). While we had expected rough and tumble science, we were pleasantly surprised by how much this one was about Eugene Dubois's human relationships and the ups and downs of his feelings. (Perhaps there is a sex difference among biographers that accounts for this.)

The first half of the book describes Dubois's family and friends to the exclusion of much of his science, with somewhat of an opposite imbalance in the second half. For example, early on we gleaned from the occasional aside and bibliography (annoyingly given mostly in Dutch without an English translation) that he wrote several papers and a book on the evolution of the sun as discerned from studying the earth's geology. Unfortunately, the author does not tell her readers how or why he did this, or how much of his time this took up, or even what he hoped these efforts would accomplish for him, though we are told that he was achingly ambitious. Instead we find excruciating details of his relations with his family and friends, and how he traversed the flora and geography of Java. Eventually, he discovered Pithecanthropus erectus, the "missing link" between man and ape.

Later, after Dubois and his family return to the Netherlands, we do get excellent blow-by- blow accounts of the scientific in-fighting as other fossils like Peking Man and other Java men are discovered that cause reinterpretation of his finds and provoke controversy about them (later they are relabeled Homo erectus). By then, despite ourselves, we were hooked on his family relations and so frustrated to suddenly be left hanging about what happened on that front. Shipman tells us how and why Dubois separated from his wife, but not explicitly why they got back together or how they get along after they did. While his children tragically die, or wander off, or or make bad marriages, we get little information about how he does end up with descendants.

Even the scientific story has some inexplicable gaps. The big debate rages over the status of Java Man and Peking Man along with Neanderthal and other finds. Even Piltdown Man takes center stage at one point. But the debates over Taung Child and other discoveries in Africa are never mentioned. Did I miss something? We both came away feeling that the book got too long and instead of editing it down, section by section, a production decision was made to simply delete some of the chapters!

Despite these glitches I learned a lot from this book. Dubois did more than find a great fossil. He wrote a great deal on encephalization quotients (i.e., the ratios of brain size to expected body size) anticipating much current work in the evolution of the brain. He also put forward daring alternatives to Darwinian gradualism, like saltations that occur in brain size and so create new species. He has major triumphs and tribulations, and then triumphs again. And most of all, The Man Who Found the Missing Link illustrates the old adage that a man's greatest strengths are also his greatest weaknesses. The independent, bold, ambitious tenacity of the younger Dubois that enabled him to abandon an early professorship to seek his fortune in Java, renders him a needlessly arrogant, stubborn, recalcitrant scientist and lonely man in his later age.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
The letter comes by the last post on a weakly sunny afternoon in February of 1937. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
transitional form between man, new skullcap, tukang kebun, thou recall, fossil human skull, giant gibbon, der zon, more apelike, betrekking tot, fossil man, cranial capacity
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Toeloeng Agoeng, East Indies, Tuan Dokter, Royal Academy, Adam Prentice, Professor Dubois, Assistant Resident, British India, Dubois Collection, East Java, Lida Adjer, Bengawan Solo, Indian Museum, University of Amsterdam, Anna Jeannette, Catholic Church, Chou Kou Tien, Grafton Elliot Smith, Raden Saleh, American Museum of Natural History, Kedoeng Broebus, Lalie Djuvo, Max Weber, The Hague, Robert Boyd
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