Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- 1 SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE
- 2 RALPH WALDO EMERSON AND THE AMERICAN TRANSCENDENTALISTS
- 3 JOHN HENRY NEWMAN AND THE TRACTARIAN MOVEMENT
- 4 DREY, MÖHLER AND THE CATHOLIC SCHOOL OF TÜBINGEN
- 5 ROMAN CATHOLIC MODERNISM
- 6 RUSSIAN RELIGIOUS THOUGHT
- 7 BRITISH AGNOSTICISM
- 8 THE BRITISH IDEALISTS
- 9 WILLIAM JAMES AND JOSIAH ROYCE
- INDEX
7 - BRITISH AGNOSTICISM
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 January 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- 1 SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE
- 2 RALPH WALDO EMERSON AND THE AMERICAN TRANSCENDENTALISTS
- 3 JOHN HENRY NEWMAN AND THE TRACTARIAN MOVEMENT
- 4 DREY, MÖHLER AND THE CATHOLIC SCHOOL OF TÜBINGEN
- 5 ROMAN CATHOLIC MODERNISM
- 6 RUSSIAN RELIGIOUS THOUGHT
- 7 BRITISH AGNOSTICISM
- 8 THE BRITISH IDEALISTS
- 9 WILLIAM JAMES AND JOSIAH ROYCE
- INDEX
Summary
A God understood would be no God at all.
Sir William HamiltonWho art Thou Lord? We know Thee not; We only know Thy work is vast, And that amid Thy worlds our lot, Unknown to us, by Thee is cast.
‘Charles Darwin: A Memorial Poem’ George John Romanesthe Unknowable seems a proposal to take something for God simply because we do not know what the devil it is.
F. H. BradleyAt the close of the last century the philosopher James Seth remarked that ‘if one were asked to name the two most characteristic attitudes of the latter half of the nineteenth century, one would be safe in answering – Evolutionism and Agnosticism'. Seth went on to observe how noteworthy and surprising it was that an age which saw such remarkable achievements in science ‘should be also the Age of Agnosticism, the epoch of the creed Ignoramus et ignorabimus'. The late Victorians, too, were struck by this fact, and it constituted a major point of debate between Anglicans and other theists, positivists, and the agnostics themselves concerning the very possibility, the limits, and the effects of this rapidly advancing temper of mind.
We only recently have come to recognize that major shifts in what people believe and in the way they live their lives are traceable not only or even primarily to intellectual causes. This is apparent to us now in assessing the spread of secularization in England in the latter half of the nineteenth century.
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- Nineteenth-Century Religious Thought in the West , pp. 231 - 270Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1985
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