Finnegan Diarmid A, Wright Jonathan Jeffrey
*School of Geography, Archaeology and Palaeoecology,Queen's University Belfast,BT7 1NN,UK. Email:
Br J Hist Sci. 2015 Jun;48(2):261-87. doi: 10.1017/S0007087414000594.
The connections between science and civic culture in the Victorian period have been extensively, and intensively, investigated over the past several decades. Limited attention, however, has been paid to Irish urban contexts. Roman Catholic attitudes towards science in the nineteenth century have also been neglected beyond a rather restricted set of thinkers and topics. This paper is offered as a contribution to addressing these lacunae, and examines in detail the complexities involved in Catholic engagement with science in Victorian Belfast. The political and civic geographies of Catholic involvement in scientific discussions in a divided town are uncovered through an examination of five episodes in the unfolding history of Belfast's intellectual culture. The paper stresses the importance of attending to the particularities of local politics and scientific debate for understanding the complex realities of Catholic appropriations of science in a period and urban context profoundly shaped by competing political and religious factions. It also reflects more generally on how the Belfast story supplements and challenges scholarship on the historical relations between Catholicism and science.
在过去几十年里,人们对维多利亚时代科学与公民文化之间的联系进行了广泛而深入的研究。然而,爱尔兰城市背景受到的关注有限。19世纪罗马天主教对科学的态度,除了在相当有限的一批思想家和话题范围内,也一直被忽视。本文旨在填补这些空白,详细探讨维多利亚时代贝尔法斯特天主教与科学接触中所涉及的复杂性。通过考察贝尔法斯特知识文化发展历程中的五个事件,揭示了天主教参与分裂城市科学讨论的政治和公民地理情况。本文强调,在一个由相互竞争的政治和宗教派别深刻塑造的时期和城市背景下,关注地方政治和科学辩论的特殊性对于理解天主教对科学的复杂挪用现实至关重要。它还更广泛地思考了贝尔法斯特的故事如何补充和挑战关于天主教与科学历史关系的学术研究。