Science, religion and society : nineteenth-century cultural contexts
139 pages
Includes bibliographical references (pages 131-139).
Nineteenth-century England was a period of change. New discoveries in science and technology challenged traditions, religious creeds and the social fabric of the nation. The century saw the birth of new influential sciences such as geology; it profoundly changed the political landscape; it challenged the way people looked at questions of selfhood and national identity; it started a process of secularization that would become dominant in the twentieth century. The case studies in this book look at Dover as a symbol of Britishness, at the growing friction between science and religion in geology and entomology, at pharmaceutical lobbying, and at how the Carlylean Protestantism in Ford Madox Brown's Work reveals a changing ‘spirit of the age'. [Publisher's text]
Collected writings, partly already publ. and now revised, enlarged, and updated.
J. M. I.Klaver, professor at the University of Urbino.
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ISBN: 9791280074799
REIHE
THEMENBEREICHE
THEMENGEBIETE
- Science -- England -- History
- Religion and science -- England -- History
- England -- Civilization
- England -- Intellectual life