Cosmology and the Scientific Self in the Nineteenth Century [electronic resource] : Astronomic Emotions / by Howard Carlton.

Carlton, Howard.
Cosmology and the Scientific Self in the Nineteenth Century
Erişim Adresi
ISBN
9783031052804 978-3-031-05280-4
Dil Kodu
İngilizce
Yer Numarası
DK/1901
Basım Bildirimi
1st ed. 2022.
Yayın Bilgisi
Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan, 2022.
Fiziksel Niteleme
XII, 315 p. online resource.
İçindekiler Notu
Part1. Introduction -- 1. Crisis and Cosmology -- Part II The Extraterrestrial Life Debate.-2 Planets and Pluralism.-3 “In Yonder Hundred Million Spheres” -- 4 “What Is Man if Thou Art Mindful of Him?” -- 5 Richard Proctor and Private Judgement -- Part III The Nebular Hypothesis -- 6 John Pringle Nichol, the Nebular Hypothesis and Progressive Cosmogony.-7 “And Eddied into Suns, that Wheeling Cast/The Planets” -- 8 “In Tracts of Fluent Heat Began” -- Part IV The Ages of the Earth and Sun -- 9 “And Murmurs from the Dying Sun” -- 10 The North Britons.
Özet, vb.
This book argues that while the historiography of the development of scientific ideas has for some time acknowledged the important influences of socio-cultural and material contexts, the significant impact of traumatic events, life threatening illnesses and other psychotropic stimuli on the development of scientific thought may not have been fully recognised. Howard Carlton examines the available primary sources which provide insight into the lives of a number of nineteenth-century astronomers, theologians and physicists to study the complex interactions within their ‘biocultural’ brain-body systems which drove parallel changes of perspective in theology, metaphysics, and cosmology. In doing so, he also explores three topics of great scientific interest during this period: the question of the possible existence of life on other planets; the deployment of the nebular hypothesis as a theory of cosmogony; and the religiously charged debates about the ages of the earth and sun. From this body of evidence we gain a greater understanding of the underlying phenomena which actuated intellectual developments in the past and which are still relevant to today’s knowledge-making processes. Howard Carlton received his PhD from the University of Birmingham, UK. His research explores a number of nineteenth-century astronomical controversies in order to demonstrate that the ideas of participants in these debates were materially altered by traumatic life-events, as evidenced by their subsequent productions and their performances of altered selves.
Konu
Church history.
Science __ History.
Astronomy.
Social history.
Church History.
History of Science.
Astronomy, Cosmology and Space Sciences.
Social History.