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This eight-volume, reset edition in two parts collects rare primary
sources on Victorian science, literature and culture. The sources
cover both scientific writing that has an aesthetic component -
what might be called 'the literature of science' - and more overtly
literary texts that deal with scientific matters.
This eight-volume, reset edition in two parts collects rare primary
sources on Victorian science, literature and culture. The sources
cover both scientific writing that has an aesthetic component -
what might be called 'the literature of science' - and more overtly
literary texts that deal with scientific matters.
This eight-volume, reset edition in two parts collects rare primary
sources on Victorian science, literature and culture. The sources
cover both scientific writing that has an aesthetic component -
what might be called 'the literature of science' - and more overtly
literary texts that deal with scientific matters.
This eight-volume, reset edition in two parts collects rare primary
sources on Victorian science, literature and culture. The sources
cover both scientific writing that has an aesthetic component -
what might be called 'the literature of science' - and more overtly
literary texts that deal with scientific matters.
Historians of science have long noted the influence of the
nineteenth-century political economist Thomas Robert Malthus on
Charles Darwin. In a bold move, Piers J. Hale contends that this
focus on Malthus and his effect on Darwin's evolutionary thought
neglects a strong anti-Malthusian tradition in English intellectual
life, one that not only predated the 1859 publication of the Origin
of Species but also persisted throughout the Victorian period until
World War I. Political Descent reveals that two evolutionary and
political traditions developed in England in the wake of the 1832
Reform Act: one Malthusian, the other decidedly anti-Malthusian and
owing much to the ideas of the French naturalist Jean Baptiste
Lamarck. These two traditions, Hale shows, developed in a context
of mutual hostility, debate, and refutation. Participants disagreed
not only about evolutionary processes but also on broader questions
regarding the kind of creature our evolution had made us and in
what kind of society we ought therefore to live. Significantly, and
in spite of Darwin's acknowledgement that natural selection was
"the doctrine of Malthus, applied to the whole animal and vegetable
kingdoms," both sides of the debate claimed to be the more
correctly "Darwinian." By exploring the full spectrum of scientific
and political issues at stake, Political Descent offers a novel
approach to the relationship between evolution and political
thought in the Victorian and Edwardian eras.
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