The systematic approach to biology started with the Greek
philosophers about 2,500 years ago. Aristotle (384-322 B.C.) is considered the
"father of biology" for his classification of animals and for
performing the first known biology experiments, dissecting plants and animals
and studying the development of the chick in its egg. His student Theophrastus
(ca. 372-286 B.C.) laid the foundation of botany, describing and classifying
more than 500 plants and also describing the ways plants can germinate and
grow. In Roman times, Lucretius (99-55 B.C.) proposed one of the earliest
theories of evolution. But other than medical knowledge, biology made little
progress until after the Middle Ages.
In the 15th and 16th centuries Europeans explored the
Americas and some of the Pacific islands, and regular contact between Europe
and southern Africa and eastern Asia was instituted. As a result European
scholars were exposed to a great variety of plants and animals that were new to
them. They responded with books describing and classifying both newfound and
familiar plants and animals, starting as early as 1530. A few years later the
first botanical gardens began to be established. When the scientific revolution
of the 17th century began, scientists undertook more detailed experiments in
biology. For example, Jan van Helmont (1579-1694) carefully measured the weight
of soil in a tub as a willow grew there, establishing that the increase in mass
of the willow was much greater than any diminution of mass of the soil.