Charles Birch

For the English sculptor, see Charles Bell Birch.

Louis Charles Birch FAA (8 February 1918 in Melbourne 19 December 2009) was an Australian geneticist specialising in population ecology and was also well known as a theologian, writing widely on the topic of science and religion, winning the Templeton Prize in 1990.[1] The prize recognised his work ascribing intrinsic value to all life.

Early life

Birch was born in Melbourne on February 8, 1918, the son of Harry Birch, a New Zealand-born bank manager with the ES&A Bank, and his Irish-born wife, Nora. He had a twin brother, Sidney, and an older brother, Hugh. Birch attended Scotch College, Melbourne, and focussing on agriculture at university in Melbourne.[2]

Birch was educated at University of Melbourne, receiving a Bachelor of Agricultural Science in 1939, and his first job was in the entomology department at the Waite Agricultural Research Institute at the University of Adelaide, where he earned a Doctorate of Science in 1941.[3]

Career

During his six years of entomological research with his then-supervisor, Herbert Andrewartha, with whom he forged a close relationship, Birch demonstrated that external processes, driven by weather and other types of disturbance, were vastly important in controlling the numbers and distribution of animals. This radical challenge to the prevailing views, namely that populations were self-regulating based on competition for limited resources, became one of Birch's major and enduring contributions to the science of ecology.[3]

In 1948, Birch became a senior lecturer in the Department of Zoology at the University of Sydney. Birch was later promoted to a Readership in Zoology in 1954 and then the Challis Chair of Biology, which he held for 25 years from 1960 to 1984.[3]

Views

Birch credited Dr Herbert Andrewartha as having a great influence on him, teaching him "to think" and to discover "the social responsibility of the scientist"[2] saying,

In view of the enormous transformation of the modern world as a result of science and technology, the scientist is responsible for much that has happened both good and bad. This understanding is based on the premise that science is not value free.[2]

Death

Charles Birch never married. He was survived by his twin, Sidney, and sister-in-law, Jenny.[2]

Publications

References

  1. Birch, Louis Charles (Charles) (1918 - ). The University of Melbourne Scholarship Research Centre, 1994 - 2007
  2. 1 2 3 4 Sydney Morning Herald obituary, "A Man of Science and Religion" 1918-2009 Charles Birch
  3. 1 2 3 http://sydney.edu.au/science/biology/news_and_events/newsletters/2010-march-newsletter.pdf

External links

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