Cantor, Geoffrey N. (Author)
This paper addresses the role of religion in the construction of scientific biographies. As a devout Quaker, Silvanus Phillips Thompson believed that biographical writing was a serious endeavour and considered that it had a moral purpose. His short biographies of Philipp Reis and William Sturgeon sought to do justice to the achievements of these two little-known inventors. Likewise, in his longer biographies of Michael Faraday and Lord Kelvin (William Thomson), he emphasised his subjects' strong moral qualities and dedication to seeking after truth. They were portrayed as committed Christians—honest, empathetic, and altruistic. In opposing the positivist view of science, Thompson stressed the role of intuition—the “Inner Light”—in the scientific discoveries made by Faraday and Kelvin.
...More
Chapter
Gay, Hannah;
(2004)
“If gold ruste what shall iren do?” Silvanus Phillips Thompson, Quakerism and Science
(/isis/citation/CBB000471153/)
Article
Graeme Gooday;
(2021)
“A many-sided crystal”: Understanding the manifold legacy of Silvanus Phillips Thompson (1851–1916)
(/isis/citation/CBB696854016/)
Article
Graeme Gooday;
(2021)
Silvanus Phillips Thompson (1851–1916): An introduction to the spotlight section
(/isis/citation/CBB258328117/)
Thesis
Stanley, Matthew George;
(2004)
Practical Mystic: Religion and Science in the Life and Work of A. S. Eddington
(/isis/citation/CBB001562117/)
Article
Matthew Stanley;
(2021)
No slaves to words: S. P. Thompson's theory of history
(/isis/citation/CBB681886550/)
Article
Gay, Hannah;
(2010)
Chemist, Entomologist, Darwinian, and Man of Affairs: Raphael Meldola and the Making of a Scientific Career
(/isis/citation/CBB000953439/)
Article
David Ceccarelli;
(2021)
Theistic evolution and evolutionary ethics: Henry Fairfield Osborn and Huxley’s legacy
(/isis/citation/CBB339183866/)
Article
Stanley, Matthew;
(2003)
“An Expedition to Heal the Wounds of War”: The 1919 Eclipse and Eddington as Quaker Adventurer
(/isis/citation/CBB000340621/)
Article
Batten, Alan H.;
(2003)
What Eddington Did Not Say
(/isis/citation/CBB000410782/)
Article
Cantor, Geoffrey;
(2001)
Quaker Responses to Darwin
(/isis/citation/CBB000671352/)
Article
Leach, Camilla;
(2006)
Religion and Rationality: Quaker Women and Science Education 1790--1850
(/isis/citation/CBB000740586/)
Article
Larson, Timothy;
(2013)
E. B. Tylor, Religion and Anthropology
(/isis/citation/CBB001320134/)
Chapter
Cantor, Geoffrey;
(2001)
Quaker Responses To Darwin
(/isis/citation/CBB000101147/)
Chapter
Cantor, Geoffrey;
(2004)
Friends of Science? The Role of Science in Quaker Periodicals
(/isis/citation/CBB000450154/)
Book
Cantor, Geoffrey;
(2005)
Quakers, Jews, and Science: Religious Responses to Modernity and the Sciences in Britain, 1650--1900
(/isis/citation/CBB000610236/)
Article
Stathis Arapostathis;
Anna Guagnini;
(2021)
Living in between: The commercial side of Silvanus P. Thompson's engineering
(/isis/citation/CBB059481221/)
Article
Harro Maas;
(2020)
Monitoring the self: François-Marc-Louis Naville and his moral tables
(/isis/citation/CBB489750642/)
Article
Wendy Sims-Schouten;
(2022)
‘A troublesome girl is pushed through’: Morality, biological determinism, resistance, resilience, and the Canadian child migration schemes, 1883–1939
(/isis/citation/CBB503354077/)
Thesis
Elisabeth M. Yang;
(2022)
Constructing Moral Babies: The Medical and Scientific Enterprise of Infancy in America, 1850s–1920s
(/isis/citation/CBB171852329/)
Article
Peter R. Anstey;
(2019)
Locke, the Quakers and Enthusiasm
(/isis/citation/CBB561862676/)
Be the first to comment!