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Cambridge Before Darwin

Cambridge Before Darwin

Cambridge Before Darwin

The Ideal of a Liberal Education, 1800–1860
Martha McMackin Garland
September 2008
Available
Paperback
9780521079006
$45.00
USD
Paperback

    In this major contribution to the intellectual history of Cambridge University, Dr Garland takes as her main theme the rise of a specific educational ideal in early Victorian Cambridge, how it enjoyed a moment of triumph, and then how it fell under the impact of a new set of challenges. The story revolves around the careers of a group of 'conservative reformers', led by the Trinity dons Whewell and Sedgwick. They were the self-designated providers of a refurbished version of traditional Cambridge values in the new environment of a rapidly industrializing England, and took as their ideal a general unified core of knowledge based upon mathematics, classics and moral philosophy. They wished to retain this general structure because they believed it corresponded to the structure of the human mind and its mental faculties. For them, belief in the harmony of science and religion was part and parcel of their basically Broad Church religious views.

    Product details

    September 2008
    Paperback
    9780521079006
    208 pages
    229 × 152 × 12 mm
    0.31kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • 1. An academic ancien regime
    • 2. Reform from within
    • 3. Mathematics - the core of 'permanent studies'
    • 4. Reaction against Paley and the Benthamites
    • 5. Religion and literature: toward the Broad Church
    • 6. The challenge of Darwin
    • 7. The disintegration of an ideal.
      Author
    • Martha McMackin Garland