Repositioning Victorian Sciences: Shifting Centres in Nineteenth-century Scientific ThinkingDavid Clifford 'Sciences' were named and formed with great speed in the nineteenth century. Yet what constitutes a 'true' science? The Victorian era facilitated the rise of practices such as phrenology and physiognomy, so-called sciences that lost their status and fell out of use rather swiftly. This collection of essays seeks to examine the marginalised sciences of the nineteenth century in an attempt to define the shifting centres of scientific thinking, specifically asking: how do some sciences emerge to occupy central ground and how do others become consigned to the margins? The essays in this collection explore the influence of nineteenth-century culture on the rise of these sciences, investigating the emergence of marginal sciences such as scriptural geology and spiritualism. 'Repositioning Victorian Sciences' is a valuable addition to our understanding of nineteenth-century science in its original context, and will also be of great interest to those studying the era as a whole. |
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... John Ruskin ( London , Methuen , 1893 ) , pp . 27-34 . See Robert Hewison , John Ruskin : The Argument of the Eye ( London , Thames and Hudson , 1976 ) , p . 176 ; also John D. Rosenberg who calls Ruskin's scientific experiments ' not ...
... John Ray and contem- porary theologians , poets and naturalists . Supporters of this model included such theologically orthodox individuals as the natural philosophers Edmund Halley , Thomas Burnet , William Whiston and John Woodward ...
... John Russell , A History of Agricultural Science in Great Britain , 1620–1954 ( London , George Allen & Unwin , 1966 ) ... John Strutt , fourth Baron Rayleigh , Life of John William Strutt , Third Baron Rayleigh , aug . edn . by John N ...
Contents
Ruskins Geology After 1860 | 17 |
Sea Serpents | 31 |
Scientist and Sorceress | 59 |
Copyright | |
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