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Indian Response to European Science and Technology 1757–1857
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 January 2009
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The spread of modern science to India, the non-scientific culture area according to Basalla's thesis, under the colonial umbrella played an important role in shaping the history of Indian people. Notwithstanding its colonial flavour, the new science left a distinct impression on the minds of the local populace. The belief that the Indian mind was not ripe enough to assimilate the new ideas, supported by a few instances of their (Indian) hostility towards some imported technologies, has dominated historical writings since the Macaulian era. This proposition requires close scrutiny of the contemporary evidence. In this paper, I have tried to explain the various shades of Indian experiences with European science and technology during the first hundred years of British rule.
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References
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142 Ibid., p. 10.
143 HP-LFC, 5 September, 1827, para 27. The sicca rupee was a stamped coin; especially the designation of the silver currency of the Mughals adopted by the East India Company.
144 Report of the Director of Public Instruction, 1855–1856.Google Scholar
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155 The booklet was entitled Arzdasut dar Bab-i-Zarurat Tarvij-i Zaban-i Angrezi-O Ulum Firang (‘An Appeal for the Study and Dissemination of the English language and Western learning.’)
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163 Mackenna, , op. cit. (128), p. 7Google Scholar. It was not in the case of implements and practices only but in matters like education the Macaulian belief was that ‘what was reasonable in England must be reasonable in India and would, when forcibly presented, prevail.’ Mayhew, A., The Education of India: A Study of British Educational Policy in India 1855–1920, London, 1926, p. 58.Google Scholar
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