Victorian Science in ContextBernard Lightman This energetic and engaging call to live life to the full offers you the chance to rethink what matters to you and why, and to do something about it. Too often we drift through life, going with the flow or being tossed by currents beyond our control, and failing to realise that if we would only fight for the life God meant us for life would be so much more fulfilling. Eric Delve, the well-known evangelist and organiser of the Detling Festival, here sets out a strong argument for intentional living, the need to engage positively with the choices that face us and the rewards it will bring if we do so. Along the way he challenges us to face up to who we really are, jettisoning pretence or fantasy, and to accept our humanity in its weakness and its high potential. Then he urges us to understand what God's purpose is for us and to let him guide us into the full life he wants for us - including standing firm through difficult times. Finally he issues a challenge to us all, to escape from the modern curse of individualism and accept the need - and wonderful opportunity - to pass on all we've learnt in life to colleagues, friends and families - because they're worth it, too. |
Contents
The Probable and the Possible in Early Victorian | 51 |
5 | 78 |
6 | 103 |
Satire and Science in Victorian Culture | 143 |
Revisioning Victorian Science | 179 |
PART | 257 |
An Introduction | 283 |
The Common | 290 |
Cable | 312 |
Zoological Nomenclature and the Empire | 334 |
Early Victorians in the Field | 354 |
Managing | 409 |
Metrology Metrication and Victorian Values | 438 |
Contributors | 475 |
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Alfred Russel Alfred Russel Wallace animals Anthropology astronomical audience biology Botany Brightwen Britain British Association Cambridge University Press Carpenter Charles Charles Darwin claims colonial context culture Darwin Darwinian Desmond early Victorian economic edited empire ence Essays evolution evolutionary figure George Herschel historians History of Science human Huxley Huxley's ideas ideology imperial institutions instruments intellectual irony James John Journal knowledge laboratory late Victorian literature London Maxwell microscope moral Museum natural history natural selection natural theology naturalists nineteenth century nomenclature Oxford phenomena Philosophy photographs physical political economy popular practice Princeton probability theory professional Punch race racial Richard Robert Royal Royal Meteorological Society satire science fiction science writing scientific naturalism scientists Secord sexual sexual selection Smyth social Society spirit standards T. H. Huxley telegraphy theory Thomas Henry Huxley tion Tyndall Victorian science vols Wallace Wallace's Whewell William William Whewell women York Zoological