Results for 'Victorian. '

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  1.  16
    Essay Review: William Whewell: Rough Diamond, Defining Science: William Whewell, Natural Knowledge, and Public Debate in Early Victorian Britain.Victorian Britain, Richard Yeo & Jack Morrell - 1994 - History of Science 32 (3):345-359.
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  2.  8
    The Victorians and the Visual Imagination.Kate Flint & Reader in Victorian and Modern English Literature and Fellow Kate Flint - 2000 - Cambridge University Press.
    Richly illustrated study drawing on art, literature and science to explore Victorian attitudes towards sight.
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  3.  6
    Victorian science & imagery: representation & knowledge in nineteenth-century visual culture.Nancy Rose Marshall (ed.) - 2021 - Pittsburgh, Pa.: University of Pittsburgh Press.
    The nineteenth century was a period of science and imagery: when scientific theories and discoveries challenged longstanding boundaries between animal, plant, and human, and art and visual culture produced new notions about the place of the human in the natural world. Just as scientists relied on graphic representation to conceptualize their ideas, artists moved seamlessly between scientific debate and creative expression to support or contradict popular scientific theories, such as Darwin's theory of evolution and sexual selection, deliberately drawing on concepts (...)
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  4.  6
    Mid-Victorian Liberalism and the Austrian state, 1848–1867.Alex Middleton - 2020 - History of European Ideas 46 (5):582-600.
    ABSTRACT This article examines attitudes towards the Austrian state among British Liberals, in the years between the European revolutions of 1848 and the Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867. Much commentary in this period treated Austria as an antagonistic, autocratic menace, as had become conventional since Waterloo. But the 1850s and 1860s also saw the growth of a more substantial interest in the architecture of the Habsburg monarchy. Its transition from despotism to constitutionalism was used to affirm some of the basic claims (...)
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  5.  29
    Victorian bodies in heat: Barri J. Gold: ThermoPoetics: Energy in Victorian literature and science. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 2010, xi+343pp, $30.00 HB.Bruce Clarke - 2010 - Metascience 20 (2):325-328.
    Victorian bodies in heat Content Type Journal Article DOI 10.1007/s11016-010-9489-x Authors Bruce Clarke, Department of English, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, TX 79409-3091, USA Journal Metascience Online ISSN 1467-9981 Print ISSN 0815-0796.
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  6.  1
    Whitehead and Victorian Philosophy of Science: A Historical Investigation of the Concept of Hypothesis.Naoki Arimura - forthcoming - Human Affairs.
    In the Harvard lectures of 1924–1925, Alfred North Whitehead proposed that our various intellectual activities amounted to an attempt to understand the world and our experiences through hypothesizing. He explained the importance of hypothesis in scientific research and extended the idea of hypothesis to the philosophical method called “speculative philosophy.” For Whitehead, philosophy was the attempt to formulate general hypotheses that can transcend disciplines. This paper is intended to explore the possible influence of Victorian philosophers on Whitehead. Victorian philosophers such (...)
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  7.  47
    Victorian physics meets industrial capitalism: Crosbie Smith and M. Norton Wise: Energy and empire: A biographical study of Lord Kelvin, 2 volume set. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009, 892pp, £43.00 PB.Bruce J. Hunt - 2011 - Metascience 21 (1):119-124.
    Victorian physics meets industrial capitalism Content Type Journal Article Pages 1-6 DOI 10.1007/s11016-011-9554-0 Authors Bruce J. Hunt, History Department, University of Texas at Austin, 1 University Station B7000, Austin, TX 78712-0220, USA Journal Metascience Online ISSN 1467-9981 Print ISSN 0815-0796.
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  8.  27
    The Victorian Translation of China: James Legge's Oriental Pilgrimage (review).Roger Corless - 2004 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 24 (1):276-278.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:The Victorian Translation of China: James Legge's Oriental PilgrimageRoger CorlessThe Victorian Translation of China: James Legge's Oriental Pilgrimage. By Norman J.Girardot. Berkeley, Los Angeles, London: University of California Press, 2002. xxx + 780 pp.Don't make the mistake I made and allow the size of this book intimidate you. I let it sit around for many months, fearing, as did the author, to "[row] out over the great ocean (...)
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  9.  36
    Victorian interpretation.Suzy Anger - 2005 - Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press.
    Victorian scriptural hermeneutics : history, intention, and evolution -- Intertext 1 : Victorian legal interpretation -- Carlyle : between biblical exegesis and romantic hermeneutics -- Intertext 2 : Victorian science and hermeneutics : the interpretation of nature -- George Eliot's hermeneutics of sympathy -- Intertext 3 : Victorian literary criticism -- Subjectivism, intersubjectivity, and intention : Oscar Wilde and literary hermeneutics.
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  10. Victorians and Africans: The Genealogy of the Myth of the Dark Continent.Patrick Brantlinger - 1985 - Critical Inquiry 12 (1):166-203.
    Paradoxically, abolitionism contained the seeds of empire. If we accept the general outline of Eric Williams’ thesis in Capitalism and Slavery that abolition was not purely altruistic but was as economically conditioned as Britain’s later empire building in Africa, the contradiction between the ideologies of antislavery and imperialism seems more apparent than real. Although the idealism that motivated the great abolitionists such as William Wilberforce and Thomas Clarkson is unquestionable, Williams argues that Britain could afford to legislate against the slave (...)
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  11.  4
    Victorian quasi‐public schools: A question of appearance and reality or an application of the principle of the survival of the fittest?D. Leinster-Mackay - 1981 - British Journal of Educational Studies 29 (1):54 - 68.
    (1981). Victorian quasi‐public schools: A question of appearance and reality or an application of the principle of the survival of the fittest? British Journal of Educational Studies: Vol. 29, No. 1, pp. 54-68.
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  12.  28
    Victorian modernism: pragmatism and the varieties of aesthetic experience.Jessica R. Feldman - 2002 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    In Victorian Modernism: Pragmatism and the Varieties of Aesthetic Experience Jessica Feldman sheds a pragmatist light on the relation between the Victorian age and Modernism by dislodging truistic notions of Modernism as an art of crisis, rupture, elitism and loss. She examines aesthetic sites of Victorian Modernism - including workrooms, parlours, friendships, and family relations as well as printed texts and paintings - as they develop through interminglings and continuities as well as gaps and breaks. Examining the works of John (...)
  13. Victorian anthropology paradox: another solution.Terence Rajivan Edward - manuscript
    Parts of the Victorian middle class were troubled by how Victorian society was both highly evolved and contained savage parts. I propose a solution to the paradox they faced.
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  14.  5
    Quaint, exquisite: Victorian aesthetics and the idea of Japan.Grace E. Lavery - 2019 - Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press.
    From the opening of trade with Britain in the 1850s, Japan occupied a unique and contradictory place in the Victorian imagination, regarded as both a rival empire and a cradle of exquisite beauty. Quaint, Exquisite explores the enduring impact of this dramatic encounter, showing how the rise of Japan led to a major transformation of Western aesthetics at the dawn of globalization. Drawing on philosophy, psychoanalysis, queer theory, textual criticism, and a wealth of in-depth archival research, Grace Lavery provides a (...)
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  15.  16
    A Calculating Profession: Victorian Actuaries among the Statisticians.Timothy L. Alborn - 1994 - Science in Context 7 (3):433-468.
    The ArgumentHistorians of science naturally tend to express interest in other forms of intellectual activity only when these intersect with science. This tendncy has produced a number of enlightening studies of what happens when science and (for instance) law or theology come into contact, but little by way of how science enters into the calculations and social status of such forms of knowledge after the conjuction has passed. Recent work in the sociology of professions, in contrast, has focused attention precisely (...)
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  16.  25
    The Victorian Abortion Law - One Year On.Kevin McGovern - 2009 - Chisholm Health Ethics Bulletin 15 (2):1.
    McGovern, Kevin After a brief account of the Victorian Law Reform Act 2008, this article reports on three responses to this law in the last year. Because Section 8 of this law restricts the healthcare practitioner's usual right of conscientious objection, this article also discusses conscience and conscientious objection.
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  17. Victorian Abortion Law Reform Bill 2008.Marcia Riordan - 2008 - Chisholm Health Ethics Bulletin 14 (2):7.
    Riordan, Marcia This report on the Victorian Abortion Law Reform Bill 2008 particularly considers the fact that it has denied health care professionals any right of conscientious objection. It sees this as part of an international attempt to deny conscientious objection against abortion, and to enforce abortion as an international human right.
     
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  18. Victorian doors.Ernest Fontana - 2006 - Philosophy and Literature 30 (1):277-288.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Victorian DoorsErnest L. FontanaILet us begin with a simple observation. If we confine ourselves to mid- and late-nineteenth Anglophone (Victorian) poetry that employs traditional verse stanzas or rooms, it is perhaps not surprising that a line terminating with door most often rhymes with more, particularly as more is found in such locutions as no more or evermore.1 For example, in the work of Emily Dickinson, door rhymes with a (...)
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  19.  7
    Victorian Critics of Democracy: Carlyle, Ruskin, Arnold, Stephen, Maine, Lecky.Benjamin Evans Lippincott - 1938 - University of Minnesota Press.
    Victorian Critics of Democracy was first published in 1938. Minnesota Archive Editions uses digital technology to make long-unavailable books once again accessible, and are published unaltered from the original University of Minnesota Press editions.
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  20.  14
    Reforming Philosophy: A Victorian Debate on Science and Society.Laura J. Snyder - 2006 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    The Victorian period in Britain was an “age of reform.” It is therefore not surprising that two of the era’s most eminent intellects described themselves as reformers. Both William Whewell and John Stuart Mill believed that by reforming philosophy—including the philosophy of science—they could effect social and political change. But their divergent visions of this societal transformation led to a sustained and spirited controversy that covered morality, politics, science, and economics. Situating their debate within the larger context of Victorian society (...)
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  21.  27
    Victorian Piety practiced.Michael O'brien - 2008 - Modern Intellectual History 5 (1):153-163.
    For some time, there has been reason for imagining that we live in neo-Victorian times. We are awash in restless evangelicals, profligate of stern and apocalyptic advice. We have had praying leaders who imagine that foreigners, usually with beards, require reform and invasion. Celts threaten secession and the Union is extolled. There is much talk of families, education, and the anxieties of class. Our novels grow long and vexed, and even have plots. Historians seek the common reader and write meandering (...)
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  22.  7
    Victorian Equations.Andrea Kelly Henderson - 2024 - Critical Inquiry 50 (2):252-276.
    As familiar as the form of the mathematical equation is to us, the ostensibly simple act of equating unlike things was an achievement many centuries in the making, and one that would ultimately redefine European mathematical enquiry such that its bias toward geometry and the concrete would be displaced by a bias toward algebraic abstraction. The moment of that displacement was the nineteenth century, and its broader significance is on particularly striking display in the British context, where the implications of (...)
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  23.  47
    Reforming philosophy: a Victorian debate on science and society.Laura J. Snyder - 2006 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    A philosophically and historically sensitive account of the engagement of the major protagonists of Victorian British philosophy, Reforming Philosophy considers the controversies between William Whewell and John Stuart Mill on the topics of science, morality, politics, and economics. By situating their debate within the larger context of Victorian society and its concerns, Laura Snyder shows how two very different men—Whewell, an educator, Anglican priest, and critic of science; and Mill, a philosopher, political economist, and parliamentarian—reacted to the challenges of their (...)
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  24.  13
    John Stuart Mill: Victorian firebrand.Richard Reeves - 2007 - London: Atlantic Books.
    The definitive life of John Stuart Mill, one of the heroic giants of Victorian England Richard Reeves' sparkling new biography can be read as an attempt to do justice to this eminent thinker, and it succeeds triumphantly. He reveals Mill as a man of action--a philosopher and radical MP who profoundly shaped Victorian society and whose thinking continues to illuminate our own. The product of an extraordinary and unique education, Mill would become in time the most significant English thinker of (...)
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  25.  6
    The Victorian Church: 1829-1859.Owen Chadwick - 1966 - Oxford University Press.
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  26.  48
    The Victorian Conflict between Science and Religion: A Professional Dimension.Frank Miller Turner - 1974 - Isis 69 (2):356-376.
  27.  10
    The Victorian Reformation Bible: Acts and Monuments.Vivienne Westbrook - 2014 - Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 90 (1):179-201.
    In 1611 the King James Bible was printed with minimal annotations, as requested by King James. It was another of his attempts at political and religious reconciliation. Smaller, more affordable, versions quickly followed that competed with the highly popular and copiously annotated Bibles based on the 1560 Geneva version by the Marian exiles. By the nineteenth century the King James Bible had become very popular and innumerable editions were published, often with emendations, long prefaces, illustrations and, most importantly, copious annotations. (...)
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  28.  54
    Distributed Cognition in Victorian Culture and Modernism.Miranda Anderson, Peter Garratt & Mark Sprevak (eds.) - 2020 - Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
    Reinvigorates our understanding of Victorian and modernist works and society Offers a wide-ranging application of theories of distributed cognition to Victorian culture and Modernism Explores the distinctive nature and expression of notions of distributed cognition in Victorian culture and Modernism and considers their relation to current notions Reinvigorates our understanding of Western European works – including Wordsworth, T. S. Eliot and Virginia Woolf – and society by bringing to bear recent insights on the distributed nature of cognition Includes essays by (...)
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  29.  8
    Mid‐Victorian Employees and the Taxman: A Study in Information Gathering by the State in 1860.Robert Colley - 2001 - Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 21 (4):593-608.
    Government's attempts to coerce the production of information from employers of labour in order to verify the income tax returns of their employees was one of the symbols of the growing reality of state intervention in the mid‐19th century. The resistance from politically influential industrialists and manufacturers which this engendered arose ostensibly from fears of a system of state surveillance and commercial espionage, in which employers were required to inform on their workforce and in which employees might retaliate by informing (...)
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  30.  10
    : Victorian Science and Imagery: Representation and Knowledge in Nineteenth-Century Visual Culture.Eva Åhrén - 2024 - Isis 115 (2):417-418.
  31.  20
    Victorian Evangelicalism and the Sociology of Religion: The Career of William Robertson Smith.Marjorie Wheeler-Barclay - 1993 - Journal of the History of Ideas 54 (1):59-78.
  32.  10
    Victorian agnosticism and liberal theology: T. H. Huxley and Matthew Arnold.James Woelfel - 1998 - American Journal of Theology and Philosophy 19 (1):61 - 76.
  33.  25
    Possessed Victorians: Extra Spheres in Nineteenth-Century Mystical Writing. By Sarah A. Willburn.Heather Wolffram - 2008 - The European Legacy 13 (6):795-796.
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  34.  9
    : Victorian Alchemy: Science, Magic, and Ancient Egypt.Kathleen Sheppard - 2024 - Isis 115 (1):190-191.
  35.  25
    The ecology of Victorian fiction.Joseph Carroll - 2001 - Philosophy and Literature 25 (2):295-313.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Philosophy and Literature 25.2 (2001) 295-313 [Access article in PDF] The Ecology of Victorian Fiction Joseph Carroll I In the past ten years or so, ecological literary criticism--that is, criticism concentrating on the relationship between literature and the natural environment--has become one of the fastest-growing areas in literary study. Ecocritics now have their own professional association, their own academic journal, and an impressive bibliography of scholarly studies. Ecocritical scholars (...)
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  36.  10
    The Victorian Sage. By John Holloway. (London: Macmillan 1953. Pp. 302. Price 18s.Antony Flew - 1954 - Philosophy 29 (110):265-.
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  37.  9
    Reviving'Victorian Values?'Ruskin and the Promise of History.Stephen Keck - 1997 - Budhi: A Journal of Ideas and Culture 1 (2):55-65.
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  38.  16
    The Victorian Sage. Studies in Argument.T. M. Knox & John Holloway - 1953 - Philosophical Quarterly 3 (13):382.
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  39.  24
    Victorian Culture and Classical Antiquity: Art, Opera, Fiction, and the Proclamation of Modernity.Hugh Lindsay - 2013 - The European Legacy 18 (6):786-787.
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  40. A Victorian Prophet with a Message for To-day.A. M. P. Dawson - 1946 - Hibbert Journal 45:253.
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  41.  25
    A Victorian Wanderer: The Life of Thomas Arnold the Younger.Edward J. Enright - 2004 - Newman Studies Journal 1 (2):107-108.
  42.  22
    Victorian Anti-Intellectualism.Walter E. Houghton - 1952 - Journal of the History of Ideas 13 (1/4):291.
  43.  31
    The Victorian creation of buddhism.Jonathan A. Silk - 1994 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 22 (2):171-196.
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  44.  6
    The Victorian City edited by HJ Dyos and Michael Wolff.Norman Af Smith - 1975 - History of Science 13 (2):104-113.
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  45. The Victorian Frame of Mind: 1830-1870.Walter E. Houghton - 1961 - Science and Society 25 (1):75-77.
     
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  46. The Ability System and Decolonial Resistance: The Case of the Victorian Invalid.Rachel Cicoria - 2021 - Journal of World Philosophies 6 (2):45-60.
    Determinations of ability/disability are rooted in coloniality, specifically in categorizations of race, gender, and animality as they bear on social formations. I elucidate this rootedness by weaving the “coloniality of ability” into María Lugones’ accounts of the coloniality of gender and the colonial-modern system as founded on the “human-nonhuman” difference. This enables me to reveal an “ability system” based on the “ability-bestiality” difference and delineate with more specificity liminal sites of oppression and resistance across the heterogeneous socialities of coloniality-modernity. From (...)
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  47.  5
    : Alexander Williamson: A Victorian Chemist and the Making of Modern Japan.Akihito Suzuki - 2024 - Isis 115 (1):191-192.
  48.  5
    Victorian Bibliography for 2001.Dinosaur Hunters - 2001 - Journal of the History of Biology 34:115-47.
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  49.  9
    Victorian self-redeemers.Dan Jacobson - 2002 - Critical Review (University of Melbourne) 42 (2002):5.
  50.  8
    The Victorian spirit.Margaret Jourdain - 1919 - International Journal of Ethics 29 (3):364-373.
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