Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - What works did Konrad Lorenz write?

What works did Konrad Lorenz write?

Conrad Lorenz's representative works are "The Goose Whisperer", "The Dog's Family", "The Secret of Attack" and so on.

This book is very popular and has been popular around the world for nearly half a century. It is an animal behavior classic suitable for all ages. In this classic work on animal behavior, Lorenz describes herons, orioles, dogs, parrots, hooded apes, trout, teal, vultures, storks, hawks, and chaffinches in detail in beautiful and vivid writing. The lives and behaviors of hundreds of wild and domestic animals such as , starlings, robins, Greek tortoises, swans, quails, penguins, etc. are full of interest. They are simply sketches performed by animals on stage. The author is just a photographer.

A brief biography of Konrad Lorenz:

In his autobiographical essay, published in 1973 in Les Prix Nobel (the winner of the prize requested such an essay), Lorenz Believing in his career to his parents, who "were supremely tolerant of my unbridled love for animals," and his childhood encounters with Selma Lagerlof's Nils Wonderful Adventures filled him with a great passion for wild things Goose.

At the request of his father, Adolf Lorenz began a premedical course at Columbia University in 1922, but he returned to Vienna to continue his studies at the University of Vienna until 1928. At this university he became an assistant professor from 1928 to 1935.