Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Editorial note
- Introductory essay
- 1 WILLIAM PALEY, Natural Theology (1802), Chapters 1–3
- 2 ROBERT CHAMBERS, Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation (1844), Chapter 14, ‘Hypothesis of the Development of the Vegetable and Animal Kingdoms’
- 3 HUGH MILLER, The Testimony of the Rocks (1857), Lecture Fifth, ‘Geology in its Bearings on the Two Theologies’, Part I
- 4 CHARLES DARWIN, On the Origin of Species (1859), Chapter 14, ‘Recapitulation and Conclusion’
- 5 CHARLES GOODWIN, ‘On the Mosaic Cosmogony’, Essays and Reviews (1860)
- 6 LEONARD HUXLEY, Life and Letters of Thomas Henry Huxley (1903), vol. 1, Chapter 14, ‘1859-1860’
- 7 CHARLES DARWIN, The Descent of Man (1871), Chapter 21, ‘General Summary and Conclusion’
- 8 JOHN TYNDALL, ‘The Belfast Address’, Nature, 20 August 1874
- 9 FREDERICK TEMPLE, The Relations between Religion and Science (1884), Lecture VI, ‘Apparent Collision between Religion and the Doctrine of Evolution’; and Lecture VIII, ‘The Conclusion of the Argument’
- Notes
- Select booklist
8 - JOHN TYNDALL, ‘The Belfast Address’, Nature, 20 August 1874
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 January 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Editorial note
- Introductory essay
- 1 WILLIAM PALEY, Natural Theology (1802), Chapters 1–3
- 2 ROBERT CHAMBERS, Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation (1844), Chapter 14, ‘Hypothesis of the Development of the Vegetable and Animal Kingdoms’
- 3 HUGH MILLER, The Testimony of the Rocks (1857), Lecture Fifth, ‘Geology in its Bearings on the Two Theologies’, Part I
- 4 CHARLES DARWIN, On the Origin of Species (1859), Chapter 14, ‘Recapitulation and Conclusion’
- 5 CHARLES GOODWIN, ‘On the Mosaic Cosmogony’, Essays and Reviews (1860)
- 6 LEONARD HUXLEY, Life and Letters of Thomas Henry Huxley (1903), vol. 1, Chapter 14, ‘1859-1860’
- 7 CHARLES DARWIN, The Descent of Man (1871), Chapter 21, ‘General Summary and Conclusion’
- 8 JOHN TYNDALL, ‘The Belfast Address’, Nature, 20 August 1874
- 9 FREDERICK TEMPLE, The Relations between Religion and Science (1884), Lecture VI, ‘Apparent Collision between Religion and the Doctrine of Evolution’; and Lecture VIII, ‘The Conclusion of the Argument’
- Notes
- Select booklist
Summary
Tyndall's Presidential Address to the British Association meeting in Belfast in 1874 is in many ways more important than the Huxley/Wilberforce clash in 1860. Huxley was merely trying to secure a fair hearing for Darwin's theory, from churchmen and scientists who were opposed to it. Tyndall was making sweeping claims for science as such, which he presents as providing a complete ‘materialistic’ explanation of the whole physical world and its origins. In the first half of the Address, Tyndall had set up a ‘conflict’ model of the relations between science and religion. He surveys the history of science as he sees it, starting promisingly with the Greeks, but later stifled by theology:
It was a time when thought had become abject, and when the acceptance of mere authority led, as it always does in science, to intellectual death. Natural events, instead of being traced to physical, were referred to moral causes; while an exercise of the phantasy, almost as degrading as the spiritualism of the present day, took the place of scientific speculation. (p. 310)
Religious thought is seen as retarding scientific thought, completely ignoring the huge debt that nineteenth-century science owed to natural theology. Tyndall presents intellectual history as a battle between the dark and the light, theology and science: in this he was influenced by Draper's The Intellectual Development of Europe (1862), one of the sources of the ‘warfare’ myth of the relations between science and religion.
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- Information
- Science and Religion in the 19th Century , pp. 172 - 189Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1984