Given the powerful and forthright title of Andrew Dickson
White's classic study, it is best to make clear his own sense of
the whole as given in the original 1896 edition: "My conviction is
that science, though it has evidently conquered dogmatic theology
based on biblical texts and ancient modes of thought, will go hand
in hand with religion, and that although theological control will
continue to diminish, religion as seen in the recognition of a
'power in the universe, not ourselves, which makes for
righteousness' and in the love of God and of our neighbor, will
steadily grow stronger and stronger, not only in the American
institutions of learning, but in the world at large."
White began to assemble his magnum opus, a two volume work first
published in 1896 as A History of the Warfare of Science with
Theology in Christendom. In correspondence he wrote that he
intended the work to stake out a position between such religious
orthodoxy as John Henry Newman's on one side and such secular
scoffing as Robert Ingersoll's on the other.
Historian Paul Carter declared that this book did as much as
any other published work "toward routing orthodoxy in the name of
science." Insofar as science and religion came to be widely viewed
as enemies, with science holding the moral high ground, White
inadvertently, became one of the most effective and influential
advocates for unbelief.
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