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  1. The origins of the British association's education section.Peter Collins - 1979 - British Journal of Educational Studies 27 (3):232-244.
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  • The Scientists' Declaration: Reflexions on Science and Belief in the Wake of Essays and Reviews, 1864–5.W. H. Brock & R. M. Macleod - 1976 - British Journal for the History of Science 9 (1):39-66.
    During the decades following the publication of Darwin's Origin of species in 1859, religious belief in England and in particular the Church of England experienced some of the most intense criticism in its history. The early 1860s saw the appearance of Lyell's Evidence of the antiquity of man , Tylor's research on the early history of mankind , Renan's Vie de Jésus , Pius IX's encyclical, Quanta cura, and the accompanying Syllabus errarum, John Henry Newman's Apologia , and Swinburne's notorious (...)
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  • Huxley and scientific agnosticism: the strange history of a failed rhetorical strategy.Bernard Lightman - 2002 - British Journal for the History of Science 35 (3):271-289.
    Huxley's invention of the term ‘agnostic’ in 1869 is often seen as a brilliant rhetorical strategy. Portrayed as an effective weapon in Huxley's public debates with defenders of the Anglican establishment, the creation of scientific agnosticism has been interpreted as a turning point in the relationship between science and religion. In this paper I will challenge this interpretation of the rise of scientific agnosticism. Huxley was reluctant to identify himself unambiguously as an agnostic in public until 1883 and his restricted (...)
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  • The Victorian Church: 1829-1859.Owen Chadwick - 1966 - Oxford University Press.
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  • The idols of the theatre: The British Association and its early critics.A. D. Orange - 1975 - Annals of Science 32 (3):277-294.
    In its infancy the British Association for the Advancement of Science derived a good deal of its inspiration from the writings of Francis Bacon. But the pursuit of Baconian policies brought with it attendant dangers which critics from Charles Dickens to the Times were not slow to magnify. Although the situation was further complicated by the sensitiveness of institutional Christianity at the start of Victoria's reign, some of the hazards which the Association endured had to be accepted simply as consequences (...)
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  • Darwinism and Calvinism: The Belfast-Princeton Connection.David Livingstone - 1992 - Isis 83 (3):408-428.
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  • Presbyterians and science in the north of Ireland before 1874.Andrew R. Holmes - 2008 - British Journal for the History of Science 41 (4):541-565.
    In his presidential address to the Belfast meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science in 1874, John Tyndall launched what David Livingstone has called a ‘frontal assault on teleology and Christian theism’. Using Tyndall's intervention as a starting point, this paper seeks to understand the attitudes of Presbyterians in the north of Ireland to science in the first three-quarters of the nineteenth century. The first section outlines some background, including the attitude of Presbyterians to science in the (...)
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