Geoffroy Saint-hilaire, étienne
Related Category: Zoology: Biographies
(ātyĕn´ zhôfrwä´ săNtēlĕr´), 17721844, French zoologist. He was professor at the Museum of Natural History (17931840) and also at the Faculty of Sciences (from 1809), both in Paris, and was a member (17981801) of Napoleon's scientific staff in Egypt. He expressed in his
Philosophie anatomique (2 vol., 181822) and in other works the theory that all animals conform to a single plan of structure. This attracted many supporters but was strongly opposed by
Cuvier, who had been his friend, and in 1830 a widely publicized debate between the two took place. Some of Geoffrey Saint-Hilaire's ideas have been confirmed by modern developmental biologists. His son,
Isidore Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, 180561, also a zoologist, was an authority on deviation from normal structure. He succeeded to his father's professorships.