Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 October 2013
Scholars have hitherto found little to no place for natural philosophy in the intellectual makeup of the Enlightened historian William Robertson, overlooking his significant contacts with that province and its central relevance to the controversy surrounding David Hume and Lord Kames in the 1750s. Here I reexamine Robertson's Situation of the World at the Time of Christ's Appearance (1755) in light of these contexts. I argue that his foundational sermon drew upon the scientific theism of such thinkers as Joseph Butler, Edmund Law, and Colin Maclaurin to counter the autonomous figurations of the universe associated with Hume and Kames, and to develop a historical account of progress based around Christian progressivism rather than the stadial theory of Adam Smith. Robertson conceived of history neither in secular terms nor in those of traditional religion, but sought instead to update the language of providentialism by naturalizing the sacred within a framework of general laws.
For valuable comments on versions of this paper I would like to thank David Armitage, Duncan Kelly, Nicholas Phillipson, Richard Sher, Jeffrey Smitten, and the anonymous referees.
1 Dugald Stewart, Account of the Life and Writings of William Robertson (1801), in Biographical Memoirs, vol. 10 of The Collected Works of Dugald Stewart, ed. William Hamilton (Edinburgh, 1858), 101–241, 105, 200.
2 Gleig, George, Some Account of the Life and Writings of William Robertson (1812), in William Robertson, The Historical Works of William Robertson, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1813), ix–lxxii, lix–lxGoogle Scholar; Bower, Alexander, The History of the University of Edinburgh, 3 vols. (Edinburgh, 1817–30), 3: 28–9Google Scholar; [Frost, John,] “The Life of Dr. Wm. Robertson,” in Robertson, William, The History of the Discovery and Settlement of America (New York, 1837), iii–xxxii, iiiGoogle Scholar.
3 Wood, Paul, “Dugald Stewart and the Invention of ‘the Scottish Enlightenment,’” in Wood, , ed., The Scottish Enlightenment: Essays in Reinterpretation (Rochester, NY, 2000), 1–35, 9Google Scholar.
4 For Stewart's dismissals see ibid., 8–9. For rejections of this treatment see Wood, Paul, introduction to Wood, ed., Thomas Reid on the Animate Creation: Papers Relating to the Life Sciences (Edinburgh, 1995), 1–78Google Scholar; Schabas, Margaret, The Natural Origins of Economics (Chicago, 2005), 79–101CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
5 My use of the term “scientific theism” follows the most inclusive definition given in Hurlbutt, R. H. III, “David Hume and Scientific Theism,” Journal of the History of Ideas 17 (1956), 486–97, 487Google Scholar. This was a “kind of theology” in the eighteenth century that employed “the new science, both as a method and as a body of factual and theoretical knowledge, in support of the Christian Religion.”
6 Grant, Alexander, The Story of the University of Edinburgh during Its First Three Hundred Years, 2 vols. (London, 1884), 1: 271–4Google Scholar; Ramsay, John, Scotland and Scotsmen in the Eighteenth Century, ed. Allardyce, Alexander, 2 vols. (Edinburgh, 1888), 1: 195–6Google Scholar; Davie, G. E., “Berkeley's Impact on Scottish Philosophers,” Philosophy 40 (1965), 222–34CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Jones, Peter, “The Scottish Professoriate and the Polite Academy, 1720–46,” in Hont, Istvan and Ignatieff, Michael, eds., Wealth and Virtue: The Shaping of Political Economy in the Scottish Enlightenment (Cambridge, 1983), 89–117CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Stewart, M. A., “Berkeley and the Rankenian Club,” Hermathena 139 (1985), 25–45Google Scholar. “Gul. Robertson” was recorded as a member of John Kerr's humanity class on 21 February 1735. This suggests that Robertson enrolled for the academic year 1734–5. Matriculation and Laureation Accounts, Edinburgh University Archives, IN1/ADS/LIB/2/Da.1.35.
7 Henderson, Robert, “A Short Account of the University of Edinburgh, the Present Professors in It, and the Several Parts of Learning Taught by Them,” Scots Magazine, 3 (Aug. 1741), 371–4, 373Google Scholar; Grant, Story of the University, 1: 273–4. Dugald Stewart suggests that Robertson attended Pringle's class, and many subsequent commentators declare this outright; Jeffrey Smitten concludes that Robertson “probably” studied with Pringle. Dugald Stewart, Life and Writings, 105; Stewart, Alexander, “The Life of Dr. William Robertson,” in Robertson, William, The Works of William Robertson, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1818), i–lxxxix, vGoogle Scholar; Bower, History of the University, 3: 28; Seccombe, Thomas, “Robertson, William,” in Lee, Sidney, ed., Dictionary of National Biography, vol. 48 (London, 1896), 425–30, 425Google Scholar; Smitten, Jeffrey, “Robertson, William (1721–1793),” in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford, 2004)Google Scholar.
8 Kippis, Andrew, “The Life of Sir John Pringle,” in Pringle, John, Six Discourses Delivered by Sir John Pringle (London, 1783), i–xcvii, vii, lxviiiGoogle Scholar; Carlyle, Alexander, Autobiography of the Rev. Dr. Alexander Carlyle, ed. Burton, J. H. (Edinburgh, 1860), 48Google Scholar.
9 Pemberton, Henry, A View of Sir Isaac Newton's Philosophy (London, 1728)Google Scholar; Pringle, John, A Discourse on the Attraction of Mountains (London, 1775)Google Scholar.
10 Henderson, “Short Account,” 373; Carlyle, Autobiography, 42; Dalzel, Andrew, History of the University of Edinburgh from Its Foundation, 2 vols. (Edinburgh, 1862), 1: 267–8Google Scholar; Grant, Story of the University, 1: 272–3; Davie, “Berkeley's Impact,” 228–31; Jones, “Scottish Professoriate,” 99–101.
11 See generally Emerson, Roger L., “Science and the Origins and Concerns of the Scottish Enlightenment,” History of Science 26 (1988), 333–66CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed; Emerson, , “Science and Moral Philosophy in the Scottish Enlightenment,” in Stewart, M. A., ed., Studies in the Philosophy of the Scottish Enlightenment (Oxford, 1991), 11–36Google Scholar.
12 Brougham, Henry, “Robertson,” in Brougham, Lives of Men of Letters and Science Who Flourished in the Time of George III, vol. 1 (London, 1845), 256–323, 261Google Scholar.
13 Dugald Stewart, Life and Writings, 105. Mathematics was a nonmatriculating class, so there is no official record of Robertson's attendance. In addition to the testimony of Henry Brougham and Dugald Stewart, however, see Bower, History of the University, 3: 28–9; Seccombe, “Robertson,” 425.
14 Henderson, “Short Account,” 372; Murdoch, Patrick, “An Account of the Life and Writings of the Author,” in Maclaurin, Colin, An Account of Sir Isaac Newton's Philosophical Discoveries (London, 1748), i–xx, vGoogle Scholar.
15 Henderson, “Short Account,” 371–2; Bower, History of the University, 2: 246; Grant, Story of the University, 1: 272. John Boswell, who attended Stewart's class in 1727, reported studying the same works by Gregory (Elements of Catoptrics and Dioptrics) and Keill (Introduction to Natural Philosophy and Introduction to the True Astronomy). Pitman, Joy, “The Journal of John Boswell: Part 1,” Proceedings of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh 20 (1990), 67–77, 68–70Google Scholar.
16 Erskine, John, The Agency of God in Human Greatness (1798), in Discourses Preached on Several Occasions, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1801), 240–61, 264Google Scholar; see Carlyle, Autobiography, 56–7; Smitten, Jeffrey, “The Shaping of Moderation: William Robertson and Arminianism,” Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture 22 (1992), 281–300, 298 n. 7CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
17 Colie, Rosalie L., Light and Enlightenment (Cambridge, 1957)Google Scholar; Simonutti, Luisa, “Reason and Toleration: Henry More and Philip van Limborch,” in Hutton, Sarah, ed., Henry More (1614–1687) Tercentenary Studies (Dordrecht, 1990), 201–18CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
18 Chamberlayne, John, Magnae Britanniae Notitia: Or, the Present State of Great Britain (London, 1708), 543Google Scholar.
19 Ernest Campbell Mossner, Bishop Butler and the Age of Reason (1936; repr., Bristol, 1990), esp. 178–97. Both Hume and Kames greatly admired Butler's work—Hume so much that in 1737 he reported “castrating” the Treatise so as to give the Bishop, “as little offense as possible.” Hume to Henry Home, 2 Dec. 1737, in Greig, J. Y. T., ed., The Letters of David Hume, 2 vols. (Oxford, 1932), 1: 25Google Scholar. For Butler's influence and interactions with Hume and Kames see Mossner, Butler, esp. 156–65; Mossner, , “The Enigma of Hume,” Mind 45 (1936), 334–49CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Jeffner, Anders, Butler and Hume on Religion, trans. Bradfield, Keith and Stewart, James (Stockholm, 1966)Google Scholar; Penelhum, Terence, Butler (London, 1985), 172–83Google Scholar; Russell, Paul, The Riddle of Hume's Treatise: Skepticism, Naturalism, and Irreligion (Oxford, 2008), 129–45CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
20 Baker, Albert, Bishop Butler (London, 1923), 10Google Scholar; see Mossner, Butler, xi–xii, 28–45, 79–100 passim.
21 For Robertson's interest in Stoicism see William Robertson (his son), “Notes for Dugald Stewart,” National Library of Scotland, MS 3979, fols. 22–3; Smitten, Jeffrey, introduction to William Robertson, Miscellaneous Works and Commentaries, ed. Smitten, vol. 12 of The Works of William Robertson, ed. Sher, Richard B. (London, 1996), ix–lv, xiii–xviiGoogle Scholar.
22 Robertson to Smith, 14 June 1759, in Mossner, E. C. and Ross, I. S., eds., The Correspondence of Adam Smith, vol. 6 of The Glasgow Edition of the Works and Correspondence of Adam Smith (Oxford, 1976), 40Google Scholar, see 40 n. 1; Ross, , The Life of Adam Smith, 2nd edn (Oxford, 2010), 95–6Google Scholar.
23 “The Rev. Mr. William Robertson, Minister at Gladsmuir” appears on the list of subscribers prefixed to the work.
24 Eighteen shillings was the advertised non-subscription price for a bound copy of the quarto edition Robertson purchased. See e.g. the Whitehall Evening Post. Or, London Intelligencer 594 (28–30 Nov. 1749). For biographical details see Smitten, “Robertson, William.” On subscription publishing in the Scottish Enlightenment see Sher, Richard B., The Enlightenment and the Book: Scottish Authors and Their Publishers in Eighteenth-Century Britain, Ireland, and America (Chicago, 2006), 224–35Google Scholar.
25 Maclaurin, Account, 3; Murdoch, “Life and Writings,” xx.
26 Maclaurin, Account, 4.
27 Wilson, David B., Seeking Nature's Logic: Natural Philosophy in the Scottish Enlightenment (University Park, PA, 2009), 65, 67Google Scholar. Maclaurin seems to have been referring specifically to Hume with the remark that “some have pursued this [skeptical] way of reasoning, till they have admitted nothing but their own perceptions.” Maclaurin, Account, 95; Davie, George, The Scotch Metaphysics: A Century of Enlightenment in Scotland (London, 2001), 19CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Gabbey, Alan, “Newton, Active Powers, and the Mechanical Philosophy,” in Cohen, I. Bernard and Smith, George E., eds., The Cambridge Companion to Newton (Cambridge, 2002), 329–57, 333–5CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Russell, Riddle, 37.
28 For Hume/Kames and natural philosophy, see Michael Barfoot, “Hume and the Culture of Science in the Early Eighteenth Century,” in M. A. Stewart, ed., Studies, 151–90; Force, James E., “Hume's Interest in Newton and Science,” in Force, and Popkin, Richard H., eds., Essays on the Context, Nature, and Influence of Isaac Newton's Theology (Dordrecht, 1990), 181–206CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Buckle, Stephen, Hume's Enlightenment Tract: The Unity and Purpose of An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding (Oxford, 2001), 68–118Google Scholar; Ian Simpson Ross, “The Natural Theology of Lord Kames,” in Wood, ed., Reinterpretation, 335–50. For the Hume–Kames controversy see Ross, , Lord Kames and the Scotland of His Day (Oxford, 1972), 152–9Google Scholar; Mossner, Ernest Campbell, The Life of David Hume, 2nd edn (Oxford, 1980), 336–55Google Scholar; Sher, Richard B., Church and University in the Scottish Enlightenment: The Moderate Literati of Edinburgh (Princeton, 1985), 65–74Google Scholar.
29 In the second edition of his Opticks, Newton wrote that “if natural philosophy in all its parts, by pursuing this method, shall at length be perfected, the bounds of moral philosophy will be also enlarged.” Newton, Isaac, Opticks, 2nd edn (London, 1718), 381Google Scholar.
30 Russell, Riddle, esp. 15–19, 31–4.
31 Russell, Paul, “Wishart, Baxter and Hume's Letter from a Gentleman,” Hume Studies 23 (1997), 245–76Google Scholar.
32 [Hume, David,] A Letter from a Gentleman to His Friend at Edinburgh (Edinburgh, 1745), 12Google Scholar.
33 Ibid., 19–27. Politics also played a role in the failure of Hume's application. Emerson, Roger L., “The ‘Affair’ at Edinburgh and the ‘Project’ at Glasgow: The Politics of Hume's Attempts to Become a Professor,” in Stewart, M. A. and Wright, John P., eds., Hume and Hume's Connexions (Edinburgh, 1994), 1–22Google Scholar; Stewart, M. A., The Kirk and the Infidel (Lancaster, 1995)Google Scholar.
34 Adams, William, An Essay on Mr. Hume's Essay on Miracles (London, 1752), 20–21Google Scholar.
35 Balfour, James, A Delineation of the Nature and Obligation of Morality (Edinburgh, 1753), 18–19Google Scholar, 169, see 123.
36 Anderson, George, An Estimate of the Profit and Loss of Religion (Edinburgh, 1753), 56Google Scholar.
37 Ibid., 45–6, 78–9, 228, 262–75 passim, 313, 324.
38 [pseud.], Phileleutherus, A Letter to a Friend, Upon Occasion of a Late Book (Edinburgh, 1751), 60Google Scholar.
39 [Hume, David,] A Treatise of Human Nature, 3 vols. (London, 1739–40), 1: 279–82Google Scholar; Hume, Philosophical Essays Concerning Human Understanding (London, 1748), 118–19 n. †; Ross, Kames, 60–7, 103–6, 109.
40 Maclaurin, Account, 388.
41 Wright, John P., The Sceptical Realism of David Hume (Manchester, 1983), 161–74Google Scholar.
42 Home, Henry, “Of the Laws of Motion,” in Hume, David and Munro, Alexander, eds., Essays and Observations, Physical and Literary, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1754), 1–69, 15Google Scholar; see similarly Hume, Philosophical Essays, 116.
43 John Stewart, “Some Remarks on the Laws of Motion, and the Inertia of Matter,” in Essays and Observations, 70–140, 126, 133.
44 Hume to Stewart, Feb. 1754, in Greig, ed., Letters of David Hume, 1: 187.
45 [Bonar, John,] An Analysis of the Moral and Religious Sentiments Contained in the Writings of Sopho, and David Hume (Edinburgh, 1755), 3Google Scholar.
46 Ibid., 49; Anderson, Estimate, 389–91.
47 [Empson, William,] review of John Hill Burton, Life and Correspondence of David Hume (Edinburgh, 1846)Google Scholar, Edinburgh Review 85 (Jan. 1847), 1–72, 13.
48 Witherspoon, John, The Ecclesiastical Characteristics (Glasgow, 1753), 25, 47Google Scholar, see 27; 2nd edn (Glasgow, 1754), 27.
49 [Smollett, Tobias,] review of Daniel MacQueen, Letters on Mr. Hume's History of Great Britain (Edinburgh, 1756)Google Scholar, Critical Review 1 (Apr., 1756), 248–53, 248. This would become volume five of Hume's six-volume History of England (1754–62).
50 [Bonar,] Analysis, 2; Nicholas Phillipson, Hume (New York, 1989), 15–16, 40–42.
51 [James Mackintosh,] preface to [Mackintosh, ed.,] The Edinburgh Review for the Year 1755 (London, 1818), v–xvi, xiv; Mackenzie, Henry, An Account of the Life and Writings of John Home (Edinburgh, 1822), 25Google Scholar.
52 Review of [Robert Spearman,] An Enquiry After Philosophy and Theology (Edinburgh, 1755), Edinburgh Review, 2 (1756), in [Mackintosh, ed.,] Edinburgh Review, 71–83, 76. The author of this review has not been identified.
53 [Smith, Adam,] “A Letter to the Authors of the Edinburgh Review,” Edinburgh Review, 2 (Jan. 1756), 123–5Google Scholar.
54 [Mackintosh,] preface, xiv; see An Examination of the Edinburgh Review, Numb. I (Edinburgh, 1755).
55 See esp. Harris, James, Of Liberty and Necessity: The Free Will Debate in Eighteenth-Century British Philosophy (Oxford, 2005), 64–103CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
56 Bower, History of the University, 3: 71.
57 Robertson, William, The Situation of the World at the Time of Christ's Appearance, and its Connexion with the Success of his Religion, Considered (Edinburgh, 1755), 6, 14Google Scholar.
58 Smitten, introduction, xxii; see Mossner, Hume, 340; Smitten, “Shaping of Moderation,” 282–3; Kontler, László, “Time and Progress—Time as Progress: An Enlightened Sermon by William Robertson,” in Miller, Tyrus, ed., Given World and Time: Temporalities in Context (Budapest, 2008), 195–219Google Scholar.
59 [Jardine, John,] review of Robertson, Situation, Edinburgh Review 1 (1755)Google Scholar, in [Mackintosh, ed.,] Edinburgh Review, 37.
60 Robertson, Situation, 7.
61 As one account has it, “Edinburgh was alive with the contest” over the fates of Hume and Kames; for “it is not difficult to imagine the interest which the inhabitants of a dull provincial city would take in a dispute in which her most eminent men were engaged.” Eugene Lawrence, The Lives of the British Historians, 2 vols. (New York, 1855), 2: 100. For a particularly outspoken attack on Hume and Kames as “free-thinkers,” “infidels,” and even “our modern infidels”—published the following year, but indicative of their long-standing reputations—see [Walker, Thomas,] Infidelity a Proper Object of Censure (Glasgow, 1756), 6Google Scholar and passim.
62 The arguments were, first, that the belatedness of Christ's appearance cast doubt on the truth of his message; and, second, that the good deeds of ancient heathens revealed virtue to have a secular foundation. Robertson, Situation, 6–7, 17.
63 Ibid., 4.
64 Ibid., 13, 18, 19, 22, 30, 43; Robertson, The History of the Reign of the Emperor Charles V, 3 vols. (London, 1769), esp. 2: 78–9.
65 See Kubrin, David, “Newton and the Cyclical Cosmos: Providence and the Mechanical Philosophy,” Journal of the History of Ideas 28 (1967), 325–46CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Cohen, I. Bernard, “Isaac Newton's Principia, the Scriptures, and the Divine Providence,” in Morgenbesser, Sidneyet al., eds., Philosophy, Science and Method: Essays In Honor of Ernest Nagel (New York, 1969), 523–48Google Scholar; Hoskin, M. A., “Newton, Providence, and the Universe of Stars,” Journal for the History of Astronomy 8 (1977), 77–101CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Force, James E., “Providence and Newton's Pantokrator: Natural Law, Miracles, and Newtonian Science,” in Force, James E. and Hutton, Sarah, eds., Newton and Newtonianism (Dordrecht, 2004), 65–92CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
66 Conduitt to Maclaurin, 12 July 1732, in Mills, Stella, ed., The Collected Letters of Colin Maclaurin (Nantwich, 1982), 41–2Google Scholar.
67 Maclaurin, Account, 85, see 387, 390.
68 Adams, Hume's Essay, 21; Plenderleath, David, Religion a Treasure to Men, and the Strength and Glory of a Nation (Edinburgh, 1754), 17 nGoogle Scholar.
69 Butler, Joseph, The Analogy of Religion (London, 1736), 128, 171–2, 189Google Scholar.
70 Robertson, Situation, 7. In The Principles of Moral and Christian Philosophy, George Turnbull set out “to account for MORAL, as the great Newton has taught us to explain NATURAL Appearances, (that is by reducing them to good general laws).” George Cheyne proposed similarly, in An Essay on Regimen, “to draw up and collect . . . general Laws of the Divine Agency in the natural, moral, and intellectual World.” Cheyne, George, An Essay on Regimen (London, 1740), 18Google Scholar; Turnbull, George, The Principles of Moral and Christian Philosophy, 2 vols. (London, 1740), 1: iGoogle Scholar.
71 Hume, Philosophical Essays, 55.
72 [Home, Henry,] Essays on the Principles of Morality and Natural Religion (Edinburgh, 1751), 375–6, see 327Google Scholar.
73 Robertson, Charles V, 1: 51.
74 Robertson, Situation, 8, 10, 13, 14–15. For Robertson's Arminian understanding of free will see Smitten, “Shaping of Moderation.”
75 Sher, Church and University, 31–2; Yeager, Jonathan M., Enlightened Evangelicalism: The Life and Thought of John Erskine (Oxford, 2011), 32–40CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
76 [Robertson, William,] “Reasons of Dissent” (1752), in [Morren, Nathaniel, ed.,] Annals of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland, from the Final Secession in 1739, to the Origin of the Relief in 1752 (Edinburgh, 1838), 231–43, 233Google Scholar.
77 Maclaurin, Account, 390; Harrison, Peter, “Newtonian Science, Miracles, and the Laws of Nature,” Journal of the History of Ideas 56 (1995), 531–53CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
78 Butler, Analogy, 188, 190, see 128–9, 185–93; cf. Penelhum, Butler, 178–81.
79 Robertson, Situation, 3–4.
80 See esp. Kontler, “Time and Progress.”
81 Hume, David, “Of National Characters,” in Essays, Moral and Political, 3rd edn (Edinburgh, 1748), 267–88Google Scholar. Ross, Ian, “Quaffing the ‘Mixture of Wormwood and Aloes’: A Consideration of Lord Kames's Historical Law-Tracts,” Texas Studies in Literature and Language 8 (1967), 499–518Google Scholar; Sebastiani, Silvia, The Scottish Enlightenment: Race, Gender, and the Limits of Progress, trans. Carden, Jeremy (Houndmills, 2013), esp. 23–43, 76–7CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
82 See esp. Phillipson, Nicholas, Adam Smith: An Enlightened Life (New Haven, 2010), 105–19Google Scholar.
83 Robertson's earliest extant reference to stadial theory has been located in [William Robertson,] review of Henry Home, Lord Kames, Historical Law-Tracts, 2 vols. (Edinburgh, 1758), Critical Review 7 (1759), 357. For the attribution, see Richard B. Sher in Smitten, introduction, xxv–xxix.
84 O'Brien, Karen, Narratives of Enlightenment: Cosmopolitan History from Voltaire to Gibbon (Cambridge, 1997), 133–4CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
85 Robertson, Situation, 7–8.
86 Ibid.
87 Cheyne, Essay, 156, 160–62, 171–3, 258; Turnbull, Moral and Christian Philosophy, 1: 35–8, 1: 223–92 passim, 2: 62–4, 2: 274–7, 2: 299–304; Maclaurin, Account, 3, 91; see also Turnbull, A Treatise on Ancient Painting (London, 1740), 39.
88 Butler, Analogy, 133, 192.
89 Benin, Stephen D., The Footprints of God: Divine Accommodation in Jewish and Christian Thought (Albany, NY, 1993), 177Google Scholar; Funkenstein, Amos, Theology and the Scientific Imagination from the Middle Ages to the Seventeenth Century (Princeton, 1986), 213–71Google Scholar; Harrison, Peter, The Bible, Protestantism, and the Rise of Natural Science (Cambridge, 1998), 133–8CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
90 Robertson played a substantial role in expounding Huttonian geology, revising the unpublished preface (c.1785–7) and probably the “Abstract” (1785) to the Theory of the Earth, as well as laying out its structure and that of John Playfair's Illustrations of the Huttonian Theory of the Earth (1802). Apart from providing stylistic and organizational help, Robertson was called on to deflect religious criticism, which he tried to do in the revised preface by downplaying conflicts with scripture and adopting what he called a “more Theological” tone. Realizing that it would probably still do more harm than good, Robertson advised Hutton to omit the preface altogether (which he did). But Robertson's subsequent assistance with Playfair's defense and explanation of Hutton in the Illustrations—a project he may have conceived—shows that he had not given up the aim of reconciling scientific and theological accounts. Dean, Dennis R., James Hutton and the History of Geology (Ithaca, NY, 1992), 22–4, 103, 108Google Scholar, 275–6; Smitten, introduction, xlvii–xlix, xlviii.
91 William Robertson, cited in Dean, Hutton, 22–3.
92 William Robertson, “Speech on Roman Catholic Relief” (1779), in Miscellaneous Works, 143–60, 150.
93 Butler, Analogy, 179.
94 Robertson, Situation, 7–8.
95 Crane, R. S., “Anglican Apologetics and the Idea of Progress, 1699–1745” (1934), in Crane, , The Idea of the Humanities and Other Essays Critical and Historical, vol. 1 (Chicago, 1967), 214–87Google Scholar; Mossner, Butler, 136–40; Richard Brinkley, “A Liberal Churchman: Edmund Law (1703–1787),” Enlightenment and Dissent 6 (1987), 3–18; Chadwick, Owen, From Bossuet to Newman, 2nd edn (Cambridge, 1987), 74–95CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Spadafora, David, The Idea of Progress in Eighteenth-Century Britain (New Haven, 1990), 85–104Google Scholar.
96 Law, Edmund, Considerations on the State of the World with Regard to the Theory of Religion (Cambridge, 1745), 53, 164, 229, 233 nGoogle Scholar.
97 Ibid., 35–6, 87, 126, 164.
98 Ibid., 187; see Crane, “Anglican Apologetics,” 272; Phillipson, Nicholas, “Providence and Progress: An Introduction to the Historical Thought of William Robertson,” in Brown, Stewart J., ed., William Robertson and the Expansion of Empire (Cambridge, 1997), 70–73Google Scholar.
99 Gleig, Some Account, xxii–xxiii, xxiv; see similarly Alexander Stewart, “Robertson,” xiii.
100 Law, for his part, cited Robertson's sermon with approval in later editions of the Considerations. Law, Considerations, 5th edn (Cambridge, 1765), 115 n. *; 6th edn (Cambridge, 1774), 118 n. *.
101 See Sebastiani, Silvia, “Conjectural History vs. the Bible: Eighteenth-Century Scottish Historians and the Idea of History in the Encyclopaedia Britannica,” Lumen 21 (2002), 213–31CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
102 Robertson to John Russell, 16 June 1788, cited in Robert Chambers, ed., A Biographical Dictionary of Eminent Scotsmen, rev. edn, 4 vols. (Glasgow, 1855), 4: 180.
103 [Gleig, George,] “Robertson (Dr William),” in Encyclopaedia Britannica, 3rd edn, vol. 16 (Edinburgh, 1796), 307–10, 308Google Scholar.
104 Hume, David, The History of Great Britain, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1754), 25–6Google Scholar; MacQueen, Letters, 133.
105 Robertson, Charles V, 2: 78–9, 2: 120.
106 Robertson, Situation, 43.
107 See Gleig, Some Account, xlviii.
108 For the first claim see Gascoigne, John, “‘The Wisdom of Egyptians’ and the Secularisation of History in the Age of Newton,” in Gaukroger, Stephen, ed., The Uses of Antiquity: The Scientific Revolution and the Classical Tradition (Dordrecht, 1991), 171–212, 204–5CrossRefGoogle Scholar. For the second see Clark, J. C. D., “Providence, Predestination and Progress: Did the Enlightenment Fail?”, in Donald, Diana and O’Gorman, Frank, eds., Ordering the World in the Eighteenth Century (Houndmills, 2006), 27–62, 51CrossRefGoogle Scholar; see also Allan, David, Virtue, Learning and the Scottish Enlightenment: Ideas of Scholarship in Early Modern History (Edinburgh, 1993), 208–11Google Scholar.
109 Horn, D. B., “Principal William Robertson, D.D., Historian,” University of Edinburgh Journal, 18 (1956), 155–68, 158Google Scholar.
110 Robertson, Situation, 4; Robertson, Charles V, 2: 78. For this claim see esp. Daston, Lorraine and Park, Katharine, Wonders and the Order of Nature (New York, 1998), 329–68, esp. 350–51Google Scholar.
111 Robertson, Charles V, 1: 51, 2: 78; see similarly Robertson, Situation, 3–6.