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Extension of Science to New Audiences

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German politics and philosophy in the early 19th century ... Because Idealist philosophy, traditional religion, and political conservatism ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Extension of Science to New Audiences


1
Extension of Science to New Audiences
  • The German situation Compared to the British and
    French

2
Popular science and general culture in
Britain, France, Germany
  • Will concentrate on German developments with just
    a few references to what you read about Britain
    a few comments on France
  • Science promoted among political leadership in
    France but most non-elite persons interested in
    science more interested in applications to
    society. Literature and lectures on scientific
    topics heavily shaped by elite.
  • In Britain, except for small working class
    movementsscience intended for middle and lower
    classes was closely tied to traditional religion
    and politics. Major role for natural theology.

3
German politics and philosophy in the early 19th
century
  • First decade, Romantic nationalism dominates
    universities student movements push is for
    unification
  • Rise of patriotic societies --i.e.,Tugenbund
    (1808), Deutsche Bund, (1810) gymnastics
    societies (Turngeselschaften (first in 1811),
    singing societies, college fraternities
    (Burschenschaften)

4
German politics -2
  • But after defeat of Napoleon c 1813 local
    nobility reasserts itself 1815 Congress of
    Vienna, religiously and politically conservative
    princedoms (39 of largest most powerful)
    confederate under Prince Klemens von Metternich
  • Traditional nobility confirmed in feudal rights
    over peasantry, courts, etc.
  • No political unification
  • Church nationalized, clergy made civil servants
    paid by state discuss Lutheran history

5
German politics philosophy -3-
  • Student led opposition
  • 1817 festival near Jena
  • Metternichs response Karlsbad Conference 1819
  • Outlaws fraternities, gymnastics societies
  • Establishes police surveillance in universities
  • Forbids political speech by faculty leads to
    dismissal of some including Oken
  • 1832 Hambach festival - 25,000 people
  • Confederation outlaws public assemblies not
    authorized by established authorities
  • Rescinds rights of local princes to extend
    citizen rights
  • Regulates speech of both students and faculty
    more severely

6
German politics philosophy -4-
  • Many faculty dismissed some band together to
    establish newspapers to push limits of liberal
    expression 1 of these, Die Rheinische Zeitung
    für Politik, Handel, und Gewerbe (Politics Trade
    and Industry), hires young philosophy grad , Karl
    Marx, as editor.
  • Because Idealist philosophy, traditional
    religion, and political conservatism and
    Naturphilosophie generally went together, student
    rebellion generally became materialist, heterodox
    or atheistic, liberal to radical in politics

7
German economy
  • Early in century ag productivity soars, but
    little urban industrial work available ( as late
    as 1847, only .2 of population working in
    factories).
  • Unemployed move to towns where they drive income
    of traditionally comfortable well educated
    artisan class down drastically.
  • Symbol of problems Silesian Weaverss Uprising
    in 1844 wages down from barely livable 10
    groshen/day to 1.5 malnutrition, etc. leads to
    Luddite type revoltPrussian response 11 dead, 24
    wounded, over 100 imprisoned increased
    radicalization of students.

8
Feuerbach Strauss -1-
  • The politically liberal, anti-idealist,
    anti-traditional religionist sentiments of
    students are focused by the writings of David
    Stauss and Ludwig Feuerbach, both theology
    students who turned to materialist philosophy and
    away from traditional religion.
  • Strauss turns to science to undermine traditional
    Genesis story of creation in 6 days (ms 5.12)

9
Feuerbach
  • B. 1804, father a distinguished judge in Bavaria
  • Studies theology at Heidelberg, but becomes
    interested in Hegalian Idealist philosophy goes
    to Berlin
  • Radicalized when brother and he (probably
    wrongly) accused of being members of a secret
    student society. Ludwig denied admission to
    university for several months, brother
    imprisoned, attempts suicide- becomes fascinated
    with radical French materialist philosopher
    Claude Helvetius --finished studies becomes
    Privatdozent at Erlangen

10
Feuerbach -2-
  • 1830 published Thoughts on Death and Immortality
    contains germ of all later work
  • Heaven and notion of immortality a
    representation or symbol of our search for
    perfection in life.
  • If taken literally, they distract from the
    reality of mortality (which is well established
    by empirical studies of organisms.)
  • Only by recognizing non-literal meaning can
    humanity concentrate on itself, its world, and
    its present with all of its heart and soul.

11
Feuerbach -3-
  • For Feuerbach reason for religion is to help
    people cope with their lives here and now the
    established church interferes, rather than helps
  • (use ms 5.20-5.21)
  • Leads him to opposition to idealism into what
    he called sensual materialism
  • (use passage from The Essence of Christianity
    (1843) 5.17-5.18)

12
Popular science scientific materialism
  • 3 men, Carl Vogt, Jacob Moleschott, and Ludwig
    Büchner, collectively write 63 popular science
    books and over 1000 articles in popular journals
    such as Die Natur (Nature a journal for
    disseminating scientific knowledge to readers of
    all classes), founded, 1852, and Jarhundert
    Zeitschrift für Politik und Literatur, founded,
    1856.
  • All 3 major popularizers of science in mid 19th
    century Germany start from Feuerbachs secular
    humanist materialist philosophy but claim (and
    probably believe) it is the natural outgrowth of
    their scientific investigations.

13
Popular science -2-
  • 2 have physician/academic fathers and family
    members persecuted for liberal views. All do work
    in physiology
  • Vogts father taught at Giessen, lost job in 1834
    because of associating with wrong people ended
    up teaching in Zurich Hochshule. Vogt himself
    exiled to Paris for helping a student escape
    police. Exists by writing science articles for
    Allgemeine Zeitung, science texts, and popular
    science books.
  • Büchners brother Alexander, charged with treason
    for meeting with suspected radicals in London
    could never return to Germany.
  • Moleschott actually studies with Feuerbach in
    Heidelberg

14
Kraft und Stoff
  • Most successful of all 19th century popular
    science works before 1890s, Ludwig Büchnerss
    Force and matter --19 German editions before
    1900 translated into 17 languages I have
    used 12th American edition ( )
  • Characteristics openly not incidentally anti
    idealist and anti religious perspective often
    called scientific naturalism

15
Kraft und Stoff -2
  • the view of nature resting on empirical
    philosophy must result in banning every form of
    supernaturalism or idealism from what may be
    called the hermeneutics of natural facts, and in
    looking upon these facts as wholly independent
    of the influence of any external power
    dissociated from matter. There seems to us no
    doubt about the ultimate victory of this
    realistic philosophy over its antagonists.

16
Kraft und Stoff -3-
  • Tremendous optimism regarding the human capacity
    to know and regarding the social benefits of that
    knowledge (5.29)
  • Law of Conservation of Energy taken to imply
    that, The universe, or matter, with its
    properties, conditions, or movements, which we
    name forces, must have existed from eternity, or,
    - in other words the universe cannot have been
    created. --doesnt consider the possibility
    that conservation laws might have come into
    existence with the universe thus could not
    serve as constraint on an act of creation.

17
Kraft Stoff -4-
  • Spirit, or soul, or psyche taken to be an
    emergent property of matter following Cabanis
    via Vogt.
  • not only physical, but psychical energies inhere
    in matter the latter always become manifest
    whenever matter is arranged in a certain manner
    and moved in a certain way in the brain or
    nervous system. --anti dualist --
  • This position taken up by Haeckel and Ostwald
    made the foundation of the Monist religion.

18
Kraft und Stoff -5-
  • Asked how mental phenomena are caused by
    physical processes he appeals to a Positivist
    principle derived from Newton
  • How and why the atoms, nerve cells, or, so to
    speak generally, matter, began to produce and
    bring forth sensation and consciousness, is quite
    unimportant for the purpose of our
    investigations It is sufficient to know that
    such is the case.

19
Kraft und Stoff -6-
  • Anti teleological before Darwin sets stage
    for German relative enthusiasm for natural
    selection.
  • Begins from Helmholtzs analyses of the
    imperfections of the human optical system
  • It becomes perfectly obvious that Nature does
    not act from conscious design or plan, but obeys
    blind necessity she necessarily calls into life
    and being a number of things which must appear to
    us if we judge only by the standard of fitness
    as utterly perverse, useless, absurd, and
    imperfect.

20
Kraft und Stoff -7-
  • Against the purposivelessness of the universe
    Büchner sets the views of Feuerbach, the
    philosopher, par excellance of emancipated and
    self-contained humanity, who finds purpose in the
    human attempt to realize its own ideal self.

21
Other Materialisms
  • Worth noting when Vogt, Moleschott and Büchner
    began writing I know of no major German scientist
    who accepted all of their views. But they did
    spread through young recruits to science i.e.
    Haeckel
  • Most common form of materialism I would call
    tactical materialism, others call organic
    physics example Herman von Helmholtz use
    knowledge of physics to explain what one can but
    admit that one does not know if it will be able
    to explain everything.
  • Other important form emerges after mid-century
    dialectical materialism of Marx and Engels.

22
German popular science --summary
  • Probably true that very few German practicing
    scientists were either full fledged materialists
    or full fledged Idealists in mid- 19th century.
  • But because overwhelming emphasis in popular
    science linked science with materialism and
    opposition to traditional religion this was the
    general message that the German public and those
    who read translations of popular works received.
  • Very different from dominant British emphasis.
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