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  1. About John Ray. His work has been highly significant within scientific circles, but is also important in our everyday understanding of plants and animals. For example, he coined the use of the terms petal and pollen and discovered that trees could be dated from their rings. A prolific author, traveller and correspondent with life-long interests ...

  2. Jan 1, 2009 · This biography of John Ray, the seventeenth-century naturalist, was first published in 1942 at the height of the Second World War. It was written by Charles Raven, an eminent theologian who shared ...

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  4. Nov 18, 2016 · In a correspondence with Mr. Edward Lhwyd on April 8 1695, John Ray shares some of his feelings about the new global flood controversies and interpretations of the Genesis flood narrative of his day. Thus his writing help to inform us about the roots of modern young earth creationist movement.

  5. Life and Times. John Ray lived through a period of upheaval in the 1600s. He was a student at the University of Cambridge during the English Civil War and left his subsequent teaching post there as a result of religious changes brought about by the Restoration of the Monarchy. His academic work was set against the backdrop of the Age of ...

  6. link.springer.com › referenceworkentry › 10John Ray | SpringerLink

    Jul 18, 2019 · John Ray (1627/8–1705, known as Wray until 1670) was an English clergyman whose work in natural history led to the modern scheme of the classification of species.Born of a blacksmith and his pious wife at Black Notley in Essex, Ray studied at Trinity College, Cambridge, where he subsequently held several teaching and administrative positions.

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