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VII - SCIENCE AND PSEUDO-SCIENCE

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 August 2010

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Summary

In the opening sentences of a contribution to the last number of this Review the Duke of Argyll has favoured me with a lecture on the proprieties of controversy, to which I should be disposed to listen with more docility if his Grace's precepts appeared to me to be based upon rational principles, or if his example were more exemplary.

With respect to the latter point, the Duke has thought fit to entitle his article “Professor Huxley on Canon Liddon,” and thus forces into prominence an element of personality, which those who read the paper which is the object of the Duke's animadversions will observe I have endeavoured, most carefully, to avoid. My criticisms dealt with a report of a sermon, published in a newspaper, and thereby addressed to all the world. Whether that sermon was preached by A or B was not a matter of the smallest consequence; and I went out of my way to absolve the learned divine to whom the discourse was attributed, from the responsibility for statements which, for anything I knew to the contrary, might contain imperfect, or inaccurate, representations of his views. The assertion that I had the wish or was beset by any “temptation to attack” Canon Liddon is simply contrary to fact.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009
First published in: 1892

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