Article ID: CBB438202580

The “History” of Victorian Scientific Naturalism: Huxley, Spencer and the “End” of natural history (2016)

unapi

As part of their defence of evolutionary theory, T. H. Huxley and Herbert Spencer argued that natural history was no longer a legitimate scientific discipline. They outlined a secularized concept of life from biology to argue for the validity of naturalism. Despite their support for naturalism, they offered two different responses to the decline of natural history. Whereas Huxley emphasized the creation of a biological discipline, and all that that entailed, Spencer was more concerned with constructing an entire intellectual system based on the idea of evolution. In effect, Spencer wanted to create a new scientific worldview based on evolutionary theory. This had consequences for their understanding of human history, especially of how science had evolved through the ages. It affected their conceptions of human agency, contingency, and directionality in history. Examining Huxley's and Spencer's responses to the “end” of natural history reveals some of the deep divisions within scientific naturalism and the inherent problems of naturalism in general. Whereas Huxley chose to separate the natural and the historical, Spencer opted to fuse them into a single system.

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Authors & Contributors
Lyons, Sherrie Lynne
Quinn, Aleta
Pereira, José Morgado
Sharp, Patrick B.
Sepkoski, David Christopher
Ruse, Michael
Concepts
Evolution
Biology
Human evolution
Darwinism
Discipline formation
Biographies
Time Periods
19th century
20th century
20th century, early
Places
United States
Great Britain
South America
Portugal
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