From Design to Dissolution: Thomas Chalmers' Debt to John Robison

British Journal for the History of Science 12 (1):59-70 (1979)
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Abstract

The claim that the nineteenth century was a period of major transition for the relation between theology and natural science has become a historical truism. With its implications for the design argument and the doctrines of divine providence, Darwin's theory of evolution has rightly attracted the attention of scholars of Victorian science. Yet so much emphasis not only on Darwin himself, but on the life sciences generally, has tended to obscure some important issues concerning the relation of theology to natural science in the first half of the nineteenth century. As John Brooke has argued recently, natural theology in this pre-Darwinian period was far from being an essentially static, autonomous, and monolithic set of presuppositions about the existence of design in nature, but was, for various reasons, in a fragmented and disordered state. The general aim of the present note is to suggest some further dimensions to historical debates about the nature of natural theology, and in particular to emphasize the need for an examination of the physical sciences as well as the life sciences in this period

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Citations of this work

Of stones, men and angels: The competing myth of Isabelle Duncan's Pre-Adamite Man.Stephen David Snobelen - 2001 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 32 (1):59-104.
Of stones, men and angels: The competing myth of Isabelle Duncan's Pre-Adamite Man (1860).Stephen David Snobelen - 2001 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 32 (1):59-104.
Nebular Contraction and the Expansion of Naturalism.J. H. Brooke - 1979 - British Journal for the History of Science 12 (2):200-211.

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References found in this work

Boyle's Conception of Nature.J. E. McGuire - 1972 - Journal of the History of Ideas 33 (4):523.
Molecular Forces, Statistical Representation and Maxwell's Demon.P. M. Heimann - 1970 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 1 (3):189.
The Unseen Universe: Physics and the Philosophy of Nature in Victorian Britain.P. M. Heimann - 1972 - British Journal for the History of Science 6 (1):73-79.

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