Science and Literature: A ReaderJohn J. Cadden, Patrick R. Brostowin |
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Page 100
... religion and the new science . In England Deism continued to mark the most liberal religious thought until the last quarter of the eighteenth century , when we find the views of Hume and those of Gibbon , Tom Paine , and William Godwin ...
... religion and the new science . In England Deism continued to mark the most liberal religious thought until the last quarter of the eighteenth century , when we find the views of Hume and those of Gibbon , Tom Paine , and William Godwin ...
Page 149
... religion . Specifically religious problems are not overtly introduced into the story , but the language of religion is there so unfailingly that , like iterative imagery in drama and poetry , it must be closely inspected if a final ...
... religion . Specifically religious problems are not overtly introduced into the story , but the language of religion is there so unfailingly that , like iterative imagery in drama and poetry , it must be closely inspected if a final ...
Page 157
... religious faith and their assumptions of what science is or ought to be . Poe's science is also a religion — not the religion of any formal churches but the religion of what a few men thought would be a scientific hypothesis concerning ...
... religious faith and their assumptions of what science is or ought to be . Poe's science is also a religion — not the religion of any formal churches but the religion of what a few men thought would be a scientific hypothesis concerning ...
Contents
SCIENCE AND CULTURE thomas henry huxley | 3 |
LITERATURE AND SCIENCE mathew arnold | 15 |
SCIENCE POETRY AND POLITICS eric larrabee | 24 |
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abstrac abstraction Aminadab ancient Annabel Lee Aristotle artist astronomy attitude Aylmer beauty believe birthmark body called century circle conception creature criticism culture dark death discovery divine Donne doubt earth Ernest de Selincourt essay existence experience eyes fact faith feeling Frost Galileo Georgiana hand hath heart heaven human Huxley idea imagination intellectual Kepler kind knowledge language laws learning less light literary literature living man's Marjorie Hope Nicolson mathematics matter means ment metaphysical Milton mind modern moral motion Mound Builder mysterious nature Newton night Paracelsus Paradise Lost perfect philosophy physical science planets pleasure Poe's poem poet poet's poetic poetry Professor reality reason religion religious Robert Frost scientific scientists seems sense soul sphere spirit stars symbol T. S. Eliot Tennyson thee theory things thou thought tion true truth Tumble-Bug universe whole Woodlouse word Wordsworth