Wright Jonathan Jeffrey, Finnegan Diarmid A
Department of History, Maynooth University, County Kildare, Ireland.
School of Natural and Built Environment, Elmwood Avenue, Queen's University Belfast, Belfast, BT7 1NN.
Notes Rec R Soc Lond. 2018 Mar 20;72(1):25-55. doi: 10.1098/rsnr.2017.0023. Epub 2017 Nov 22.
Recent years have seen the development of a more nuanced understanding of the emergence of scientific naturalism in the nineteenth century. It has become apparent that scientific naturalism did not emerge in the years following the publication of Charles Darwin's (1859), but was present, if only in incipient form, much earlier in the century. Building on recent scholarship, this article adopts a geographically focused approach and explores debates about geology and phrenology-two of the diverse forms of knowledge that contributed to scientific naturalism-in late-Georgian Belfast. Having provided the venue for John Tyndall's infamous 1874 address as president of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, Belfast occupies a central place in the story of nineteenth-century scientific naturalism. However, in uncovering the intricate and surprising ways in which scientific knowledge gained, or was denied, epistemic and civic credibility in Belfast, this discussion will demonstrate that naturalism, materialism and the relationship between science and religion were matters of public debate in the town long before Tyndall's intervention.
近年来,人们对19世纪科学自然主义的兴起有了更细致入微的理解。显而易见,科学自然主义并非在查尔斯·达尔文(1859年)发表著作后的那些年才出现,而是在该世纪早期就已存在,尽管只是初具雏形。基于最近的学术研究,本文采用以地域为重点的方法,探讨了乔治王时代后期的贝尔法斯特关于地质学和颅相学的争论——这是促成科学自然主义的两种不同知识形式。作为约翰·廷德尔于1874年作为英国科学促进协会主席发表臭名昭著演讲的举办地,贝尔法斯特在19世纪科学自然主义的故事中占据着核心地位。然而,在揭示科学知识在贝尔法斯特获得或被剥夺认知和公民可信度的复杂而惊人的方式时,本次讨论将表明,早在廷德尔介入之前,自然主义、唯物主义以及科学与宗教之间的关系就在该镇成为了公众辩论的话题。