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Nebular Contraction and the Expansion of Naturalism

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 January 2009

J. H. Brooke
Affiliation:
University of Lancaster

Abstract

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Type
Essay Reviews
Copyright
Copyright © British Society for the History of Science 1979

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References

NOTES

1 Gillispie, C. C. (et at.), ‘Laplace’, in C. C. Gillispie (ed.), Dictionary of scientific biography, Supplementary volume, forthcoming.Google Scholar

2 Merleau-Ponty, J., ‘Situation et rôle de l'hypothèse cosmogonique dans la pensée cosmologique de Laplace’, Revue d'histoire des sciences, 1976, 29, 2149.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

3 Jaki, S. L., ‘The five forms of Laplace's cosmogony’, American journal of physics, 1976, 44, 411.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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5 Schweber, S. S., ‘Auguste Comte and the nebular hypothesis’, forthcoming in this Journal I am grateful to Professor Schweber for having sent me an advance copy of his manuscript.Google Scholar

6 Lawrence, P., ‘Heaven and earth—the relation of the nebular hypothesis to geology’, in Yourgrau, W. and Breck, A. D. (eds.), Cosmology, history, and theology, New York & London, 1977, pp. 253–81.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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8 Baxter, P., ‘Natural law versus divine miracle: the Scottish Evangelical response to Vestiges of the natural history of creation’, mimeographed paper presented to the British Society for the History of Science conference on ‘New perspectives on the history of geology’, Cambridge, 04 1977.Google Scholar

9 The theological dimension beneath Chalmers' pronouncements on the natural world has been explored by Cairns, D., ‘Thomas Chalmers's Astronomical discourses: a study in natural theology’, Scottish journal of theology, 1956, 9, 410–21CrossRefGoogle Scholar; by Rice, D. F., ‘Natural theology and the Scottish philosophy in the thought of Thomas Chalmers’Google Scholar, ibid., 1971, 24, 23–46; and most recently by Smith, Crosbie, ‘From design to dissolution: Thomas Chalmers' debt to John Robinson’, The British journal for the history of science, 1979, 12, 5969.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

10 In addition to featuring prominently in the accounts of both Numbers and Schweber, Nichol has also been discussed in the context of his rôle as teacher of the young William Thomson: Wilson, D. B., ‘Kelvin's scientific realism: the theological context’, Philosophical journal, 1974, 11, 4155.Google Scholar

11 Merleau-Ponty, , op. cit. (2), 40.Google Scholar

12 Gillispie, , op. cit. (1), 344.Google Scholar

13 Laplace, The system of the world, trans. by Harte, H. H., Dublin, 1830, ii, 331–3.Google Scholar Excerpts from this translation of the fifth French edition are reproduced by Numbers in a nine-page appendix.

14 Laplace sought ‘une évolution antérieure des configurations observées, une raison de leur stabilité qui dispense du recours aux causes finales’. Merleau-Ponty, , op. cit. (2), pp. 34–5.Google Scholar

15 Lawrence, , op. cit. (6), pp. 262–70.Google Scholar

16 Ibid., p. 273. See also the same author's ‘Charles Lyell versus the theory of central heat: a reappraisal of Lyell's place in the history of geology’, Journal of the history of biology, 1978, 11, 101–28.Google Scholar For closely related emphases see Rudwick, M. J. S., ‘Uniformity and progression: reflections on the structure of geological theory in the age of Lyell’, in Roller, D. (ed.), Perspectives in the history and philosophy of science, Oklahoma, 1971, pp. 209–27.Google Scholar

17 Lawrence, , op. cit. (6), p. 278.Google Scholar

18 Whewell, W., ‘Second memoir on the fundamental antithesis of philosophy’ (1848), reproduced in his On the philosophy of discovery, London, 1860, p. 305.Google Scholar

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22 American review, 1846, 3, 395Google Scholar; cited by Numbers, p. 35.

23 Brooke, , op. cit. (7), pp. 264–8.Google Scholar

24 Princeton review, 1845, 17, 513–14Google Scholar; cited by Numbers, p. 34.

25 Baxter, , loc. cit. (8).Google Scholar

26 Brooke, , op. cit. (7), pp. 233, 268.Google Scholar

27 Brewster, D., ‘The revelations of astronomy’, North British review, 1846, p. 240Google Scholar; cited by Baxter, , loc. cit. (8).Google Scholar

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29 Peirce, B., ‘On the connection of comets with the solar system’, Proceedings of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, 1849, 2, 121Google Scholar; cited by Numbers, p. 39. That the nebular hypothesis in its regulative aspect had become almost impregnable is also suggested by the interesting remark of William Henry Smith which Baxter cites. At the explanatory level it was still a hypothesis, but it had ‘assumed a shape and consistency which forbids an entire rejection of it’. Blackwood's Edinburgh magazine, 1845, 57, 448–9Google Scholar; cited by Baxter, , loc. cit. (8).Google Scholar

30 Cited by Numbers, p. 74.

31 Jaki, , op. cit. (3), p. 7 (my emphasis).Google Scholar

32 Ibid., p. 9.

33 This was one of my contentions in my op. cit. (7), especially pp. 222–8. I have tried to make the same point in a different way in ‘The natural theology of the geologists: some theological strata’, in Jordanova, L. J. and Porter, R. S. (eds.), Images of the earth, Chalfont St Giles, 1979, pp. 3964.Google Scholar

34 Conry, Y., L'introduction du darwinisme en France au XIXe siécle, Paris, 1974, pp. 415–21.Google Scholar ‘La grande ombre de Comte est devenue le tombeau de Darwin …’ (p. 419).

35 Brooke, , op. cit. (7), pp. 267–73, 281.Google Scholar

36 Gray, A., ‘Explanations of the Vestiges’, North American review, 1846, 62, 466Google Scholar; cited by Numbers, p. 33. It is true that Gray later constructed analogies between the nebular hypothesis and Darwinian evolution in order to make the case for saying that the latter no more negated design than the former (pp. 113–16). But the fact that he had to make the case at all suggests not that the nebular hypothesis had prepared the ground for the acceptance of Darwin, but that the American people had to be told that it had. As Numbers himself goes on to say (p. 117), the more conservative Christians continued to see a marked distinction between inorganic and organic development. One wonders if it was only the conservatives who did.

37 Dawson, J. W., Modern ideas of evolution (1890), ed. by Shea, W. R. and Cornell, J. F., New York, 1977, p. 239.Google Scholar

38 Ibid., p. 213.

39 Huxley, T. H., ‘On the reception of the Origin of species’, in Darwin, F. (ed.), The life and letters of Charles Darwin, 3 vols., London, 1887, ii, 190.Google Scholar

40 Numbers, p. 166, n. 1.

41 Moore, J. R., ‘The post-Darwinian controversies: a study of the Protestant struggle to come to terms with Darwin in Great Britain and America, 1870–1900’, University of Manchester PhD thesis, 1975.Google Scholar

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43 Durant, J. R., ‘The meaning of evolution: post-Darwinian debates on the significance for man of the theory of evolution, 1858–1908’, University of Cambridge PhD thesis, 1977, pp. 5596.Google Scholar

44 Brown, J. B., ‘The intellectual revolution of the last quarter of a century’, in his First principles of ecclesiastical truth, London, 1871, p. 208.Google Scholar For a summary of Brown's analysis see Brooke, , ‘The natural theology of the geologists’, op. cit. (33), pp. 54–5.Google Scholar It is not necessary to accept the details of Brown's personal view of the ‘revolution’ to see that the extra dimensions are worth exploring.

45 Kingsley, to Maurice, F. D., 1863, in Charles Kingsley: his letters and memories of his life, ed. by his wife, London, 1883, p. 253.Google Scholar

46 Kingsley, to Maurice, , 1865Google Scholar, ibid., p. 267.

47 Anon. [D. Brewster], ‘Review of Comte's Cours de philosophie positive’, Edinburgh review, 1838, 67, 271308Google Scholar; cited by Manier, E., The young Darwin and his cultural circle, Dordrecht & Boston, 1978, p. 41.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

49 Cited by Manier from Darwin's Metaphysical Notebook M, ibid.

50 Ibid., p. 167.