Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-hc48f Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-22T13:55:59.645Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Charles Lyell and the Principles of the History of Geology

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 January 2009

Roy Porter
Affiliation:
Churchill College, Cambridge CB3 0DS.

Extract

History is the science which investigates the successive changes that have taken place in the material and intellectual conditions of man; it inquires into the causes of those changes, and the influence which they have exerted in modifying the life and mind of mankind.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © British Society for the History of Science 1976

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

1 Cf. Lyell, Charles, Principles of geology, or the modern changes of the earth and its inhabitants considered as illustrative of geology, vol. i (London, 1830), p. 1. (Henceforth cited as Principles.)Google Scholar
2 Cf. Ramsay, Andrew, Passages in the history of geology (London, 1848);Google Scholar
SirGeikie, Archibald, Founders of geology (London, 1897),Google Scholar
chapter XII; Bonney, T. G., Charles Lyell and modern geology (London, 1895);Google Scholar
SirBailey, E. B., Charles Lyell (London, 1962).Google Scholar
3 [] MrsLyell, K. M. (ed.), Life, letters and journals of Sir Charles Lyell, Bart. (2 vols., London, 1881), i. 268. (Henceforth cited as LLJ.)Google Scholar
4 Thus, writing of an episode in the history of geology, Bonney writes, it ‘cannot be better summed up than in Lyell's own words’; see Bonney, , op. cit. (2), p. 80. Bonney's account of the history of geology is indeed nothing other than a précis of Lyell's first four chapters.Google Scholar
5Whewell, W., History of the inductive sciences from the earliest to the present times (3rd edn., 3 vols., London, 1857), iii. 398520.Google Scholar
6Gillispie, C. C., Genesis and geology (Cambridge, Mass., 1951),Google Scholar
chapter V; Kuhn, T. S., The structure of scientific revolutions (Chicago, 1962), p. 10;Google Scholar
Wilson, Leonard G., Charles Lyell. The years to 1841: the revolution in geology (New Haven, 1972), where Wilson talks of Lyell's ‘revolutionary influence on the history of science’ (p. xi).Google Scholar
7 For Lyell's equivalent injunction for how to do geology, see Principles, i. 3.Google Scholar
8 For a historiographical stress on ‘meaning’, see Rudwick, M. J. S., The meaning of fossils (New York and London, 1972).Google Scholar
9 Cf. Lyell, Principles, vol. i, heading to chapter I. There has been almost no historiographical debate over the principles and practice of the history of geology. In this respect, Schneer, C. J. (ed.), Toward a history of geology (Cambridge, Mass., 1969),Google Scholar
is disappointing. But see Rappaport, Rhoda, ‘Problems and sources in the history of geology’, History of science, iii (1964), 6078,CrossRefGoogle Scholar
and Eyles, V. A., ‘The history of geology; suggestions for further research’, History of science, v (1966), 7786.Google Scholar
10LLJ, i. 271.Google Scholar
11Rudwick, M. J. S., ‘The strategy of Lyell's Principles of geology’, Isis, lxi (1970), 433 (9).Google Scholar
12 Cf. [Playfair, J.], Review of Transactions of the Geological Society of London, Edinburgh review, xix (1811), 207–28;Google Scholar
[Fitton, W. H.], Review of Transactions of the Geological Society of London, Edinburgh review, xxviii (1817), 7094;Google Scholar
[Fitton, W. H.], Review of A delineation of the strata of England and Wales, Edinburgh review, xxx (1818), 312–37;Google Scholar
Buckland, William, Vindiciae geologicae (Oxford, 1820);Google Scholar
Conybeare, W. D., ‘Report on the progress, actual state and ulterior prospects of geological science’, in Report of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, 1831–2 (London, 1833), pp. 365414;Google Scholar
Encyclopaedia Britannica (4th edn., Edinburgh, 1810),Google Scholar
sub GEOLOGY; Rees's cyclopaedia (London, 1819), vol. xvi,Google Scholar
sub GEOLOGY. Almost nothing has been written evaluating early-nineteenth-century accounts of the history of geology. For a largely bibliographical start, see White, George W., ‘The history of geology and mineralogy as seen by American writers, 1803–1835: a bibliographical essay’, Isis, lxiv (1974), 197214.Google Scholar
13Desmarest, N., ‘Géographie physique’, in Encyclopédie méthodique, ou par ordre de matières: Par une société de gens de lettres, de savans et d'artistes (5 vols., Paris, 17941828);Google Scholar
Brocchi, G. B., Conchologia fossile subapennina (2 vols., Milan, 1814);Google Scholar
Keferstein, C., Geschichte und Litteratur der Geognosie (Halle, 1840). The one other contemporary British account of the history of geology of some intellectual breadth is that of Humphry Davy, of which an edition is being prepared from a manuscript in possession of the Royal Geological Society of Cornwall by Professor A.M. Ospovat. In many ways, Davy parallels Lyell, but as the philosopher of the progressionists.Google Scholar
14 As is well emphasized in [Scrope, G. P.], Review of Charles Lyell, Principles of geology, Quarterly review, xliii (1830), 411–69.Google Scholar
15 For Lyell's strategical dissimulation, cf. LLJ, i. 173 and 271.Google Scholar
16 For Lyell's preoccupation with popular interference in geology, see Principles, i. 28.Google Scholar
17Lyell, , Principles, i. 21 f., where he is indirectly assailing Christian priesteraft through an attack on Islam. His discussion of Buffon mainly centres on his persecution by the Sorbonne (p. 48).Google Scholar
18 For important insight into Lyell's religious commitments, see Bartholomew, Michael, ‘Lyell and evolution: an account of Lyell's response to the prospect of an evolutionary ancestry for man’, The British journal for the history of science, vi (19721973), 261303;Google Scholar
Rudwick, M. J. S., ‘Charles Lyell, F.R.S. (1797–1875) and his London lectures on geology (1832–3)’, Notes and records of the Royal Society of London, xxix (1975), 231–63.Google Scholar
19 Cf., in particular, Lyell's published correspondence with Ticknor, George (LLJ, vol. ii), and Rudwick, op. cit. (18), for Lyell's relations with the Anglican hierarchy during his tenure of the chair at King's College, London.Google Scholar
20Lyell, , Principles, i. 20.Google Scholar
Lyell saw Voltaire as a philosopher whose bad faith subverted geology to his own philosophical polemics; see Principles, i. 65–6.Google Scholar
21Lyell, , Principles, i. 81 f. For Lyell, nosce teipsum is the first rule for the geologist, to purge him of anthropocentrism and anthropomorphism.Google Scholar
22 Cf. Bartholomew, op. cit. (18), and Bynum, W. F., ‘Time's noblest offspring: the problem of man in the British natural historical sciences, 1800–63’ (Cambridge University Ph.D. thesis, 1974), especially chapter V.Google Scholar
23Wilson, L. G. (ed.), Sir Charles Lyell's scientific notebooks on the species question (New Haven, 1970).Google Scholar
Charles Raven noted that Lyell's scathing treatment of the seventeenth-century physicotheologians revealed his own unconscious ambiguities on the subject; see his John Ray, naturalist (Cambridge, 1950), p. 441.Google Scholar
24Lyell, , Principles, i. 8, 76, and passim—for Lyell's conceptions are inseparable from his whole style of thought and vocabulary. Such notions are, of course, the bread-and-butter of Enlightenment speculative anthropology and Scottish conjectural history.Google Scholar
25Lyell, , Principles, i. 10.Google Scholar
26Lyell, , Principles, i. 76.Google Scholar
27 As well as being the episteme of savagery, catastrophism is also symptomatic of moral decay and failure of nerve amongst the more civilized. Cf. Principles i. 10. Lyell uses Prichard's work on Egyptian mythology to suggest that this kind of thinking, in whichever epoch, is no more advanced than die idea of a ‘mundane egg’. I owe this point to Michael Neve. Compare the comments of E. H. Carr on the functions of cyclical catastrophist thinking in his What is history? (Harmondsworth, 1967), pp. 43–6.Google Scholar
28LLJ, i. 27.Google Scholar
29Rudwick, , op. cit. (11), p. 9.Google Scholar
30 The manuscript materials quoted in the first volume of Leonard Wilson's biography do not illuminate these issues much further than the LLJ.Google Scholar
31LLJ, i. 271.Google Scholar
32 [Fitton, W. H.], ‘Review of Charles Lyell, Elements of geology’, Edinburgh review, lxix (1839), 406–66;Google Scholar
cf. Bailey, , op. cit. (2), p. 130.Google Scholar
33LLJ, i. 271.Google Scholar
34Lyell, , Principles, i. 54 f. Of de Saussure, Lyell wrote ungenerously: ‘The few theoretical observations which escaped from him are, like those of Pallas, mere modifications of the old cosmological theories’ (p. 54).Google Scholar
35Lyell, , Principles, i. 35.Google Scholar
36 He writes: Lazzoro Moro. This mistake is corrected in subsequent editions, unlike many of the errors of fact.Google Scholar
37Lyell, , Principles, i. 42 f.Google Scholar
38Lyell, , Principles, i. 4.Google Scholar
39Lyell, , Principles, i. 63 f.Google Scholar
Lyell's unfavourable contrasting of Hutton to Generelli on this point is therefore misplaced. Lyell candidly admitted, ‘I doubt whether I ever fairly read more than half his writings and skimmed the rest’; LLJ, ii. 48. Cf.Google Scholar
Bailey, , op. cit. (2), p. 81.Google Scholar
40Lyell, , Principles, i. 61.Google Scholar
41 Though he does discuss recent advances in geology in Principles, i. 71 f., i.e. at the end of chapter IV.Google Scholar
42 As is evident from Principles, i. chapter V, the purpose of which is to show how false consciousness on the subject of time and man continue to retard geology.Google Scholar
43 Raspe revived and popularized Hooke (using Hooke as a mouthpiece for his own views). Generelli did the same for Moro and Playfair for Hutton.Google Scholar
44 Lyell, Principles, i. 74.Google Scholar
45 Lyell, of course (like Hutton), saw himself as applying the infinity and uniformity of Newtonian space to the dimension of time, and transforming geology into a science of causes.Google Scholar
46Lyell, , Principles, i. 39.Google Scholar
47Lyell, , Principles, i. 63Google Scholar
(my italics). He similarly miscited Hutton, in LLJ, i. 270.Google Scholar
It is conceivable that Lyell took his error from Conybeare, W. D. and Phillips, W., Outlines of the geology of England and Wales, Part I (London, 1822), p. xlix., where ‘traces’ is used in a summary of Hutton's views.Google Scholar
48 For this historiography in England, cf. Peardon, T., The transition in English historical writing, 1760–1830 (2 vols., New York, 1933). Cf.Google Scholar
Lyell, , Principles, i. 23 f.Google Scholar
49Buckle, T. H., A history of civilization in England (2 vols., London, 18571861);Google Scholar
Draper, J. W., A history of the conflict between science and religion (2nd edn., London, 1875);Google Scholar
White, Andrew D., A history of the warfare of science with theology in Christendom (2 vols., London, 1896).Google Scholar
For Scott's rationalism, cf. Forbes, Duncan, ‘The rationalism of Sir Walter Scott’, Cambridge journal, vii (1953). 2035.Google Scholar
50 Lyell's autobiographical fragment has frequent references to his early ambition; see LLJ, i. 17, 25 f.Google Scholar
51 For Lyell's anonymous reviews, see ‘Review of various scientific institutions in England’, Quarterly review, xxxiv (1826), 153–79;Google Scholar
‘Review of Transactions of the Geological Society of London’, Quarterly review, xxxiv (1826), 507–40;Google Scholar
‘Review of G. P. Scrope's Memoir on the geology of Central France’, Quarterly review, xxxvi (1827) 437–83.Google Scholar
52 I.e., Niebuhr, B. G., The history of Rome, trans, by Hare, J. C. and Thirlwall, C. (3 vols., Cambridge, 18281842).Google Scholar
53 For Niebuhr's historiographical revolution, cf. Fritz Stern, Varieties of history (New York, 1956), pp. 4653;Google Scholar
Gooch, G. P., History and historians in the nineteenth century (London, 1961), pp. 1423;Google Scholar
Forbes, Duncan, The liberal Anglican idea of history (Cambridge, 1952), pp. 1219.Google Scholar
54Wilson, , op. cit. (6), p. 180. Cf.Google Scholar
Lyell, , Principles, i. 79 f.Google Scholar
55Wilson, , op. cit. (8), p. 215.Google Scholar
For a more conventional use of the analogy, cf., for example, [Copleston, E.], ‘Review of W. Buckland, Reliquiae diluvianae’, Quarterly review, xxix (1823), 129–65 (139).Google Scholar
56Forbes, , op. cit. (53), p. 198:Google Scholar
‘There is, in fact, a distinct chain of ideas from Hume to Hutton, Lyell and Darwin’. Lyell's position is complex. His history of geology is catastrophic. But when he appeals to history as offering a model for geology, his picture of history is gradualist; see Principles, i. 3 f.Google Scholar
57 For example, his rejection of vulgar Baconianism and his championing of the necessary role of theory; Principles, i. 71–2. Fitton's reviews in particular (op. cit [12]) had associated the progress of geology with Baconianism. Lyell's own reviews (see note 51) seek to redress the balance.Google Scholar
58Lyell, , Principles, i. 30: ‘A sketch of the progress of Geology is the history of a constant and violent struggle between new opinions and ancient doctrines, sanctioned by the implicit faith of many generations, and supposed to rest on scriptural authority’.Google Scholar
59Cannon, W. F., ‘The problem of miracles in the 1830s’, Victorian studies, iv (1960), 432;Google Scholar
Cannon, W. F., ‘The Uniformitarian-Catastrophist debate’, Isis, li (1960), 3855;CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rudwick, M. J. S., ‘Uniformity and progression: reflections on the structure of geological theory in the age of Lyell’, in Roller, D. H. D. (ed.), Perspectives in the history of science and technology (Norman, Oklahoma, 1971), 209–27;Google Scholar
Hooykaas, R. J., Natural law arid divine miracle: a historical critical study of the principle of uniformity in geology, biology and theology (Leyden, 1959);Google Scholar
Page, Leroy E., ‘Diluvialism and its critics in Great Britain in the early nineteenth century’, in Schneer, C. J. (ed.), Toward a history of geology (Cambridge, Mass., 1969), pp. 257–71.Google Scholar
60 For Scrope, see Rudwick, M. J. S., ‘Poulett Scrope on the volcanoes of Auvergne: Lyellian time and political economy’, The British journal for the history of science, vii (1974), 205–42. For Sedgwick, cf. Cannon, op. cit. (59), and Rudwick, op. cit. (59).Google Scholar
61 Thus Lyell's judgement on Werner's theory: ‘One of the most unphilosophical ever advanced in any science’; see Principles, i. 59.Google Scholar
62 T. S. Kuhn, op. cit. (6): Toulmin, S. E., Human understanding, vol. i (Oxford, 1972).Google Scholar
For a brief discussion of the comparative merits of revolutionary and evolutionary approaches to the history of geology, see Porter, Roy, ‘The history of palaeontology’, History of science, xi (1973), 130–8.Google Scholar
63Lyell, , Principles, i. 45.Google Scholar
64Lyell, , Principles, i. 67.Google Scholar
65Lyell, , Principles, i. 4. Such a view was, of course, characteristic of Scottish Enlightenment conjectural history.Google Scholar
66Barnes, Barry, Scientific knowledge and sociological theory (London, 1974), passim.Google Scholar
67 For an important discussion of the ‘myth’ of ‘pure science’, see Ravetz, J. R., Scientific knowledge and its social problems (London, 1971),Google Scholar
and Young, R. M., ‘The historiographic and ideological contexts of the nineteenth-century debate on man's place in nature’, in Teich, M. and Young, R. M. (eds.), Changing perspectives in the history of science (London, 1973), pp. 344438.Google Scholar
68Lyell, , Principles, i. 4.Google Scholar
69 Cf. Foucault, M., The order of things (London, 1970),Google Scholar
and The archaeology of knowledge (London, 1972):Google Scholar
Pantin, C. F. A., The relations between the sciences (Cambridge, 1968).Google Scholar
70 For this interpretation of the growth of geology, cf. Porter, Roy, ‘The making of the science of geology in Britain, 1660–1815’ (Cambridge University Ph.D. thesis, 1974).Google Scholar
71Lyell, , Principles, i. 74.Google Scholar