Literature and Science in the Nineteenth Century

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Last edited by AgentSapphire
April 8, 2024 | History

Literature and Science in the Nineteenth Century

Reissued (9)
  • 4 Want to read
  • 1 Currently reading

LITERATURE AND SCIENCE IN THE NINETEENTH CENTURY. PROLOGUE: LITERATURE AND SCIENCE.
Sonnet---To Science (1829) / Edgar Allan Poe
The Belfast Address (1874) / John Tyndall
From Science and Culture (1880) / Thomas Henry Huxley
Literature and Science (1882) / Matthew Arnold
MATHEMATICS, PHYSICAL SCIENCE, AND TECHNOLOGY. Mathematics.
Sketch of the Analytical Engine (1843) / Ada Lovelace
From Formal Logic (1847) / Augustus De Morgan
From An Investigation of the Laws of Thought (1854) / George Boole
From The Logic of Chance (1866) / John Venn
From Through the Looking-Glass (1871)
From The Game of Logic (1886) / Lewis Carroll
From Daniel Deronda (1876) / George Eliot
From The Time Machine (1895) / H.G. Wells
Physical Science. From On the Power of Penetrating into Space by Telescopes (1800) / Sir William Herschel
From Past and Present (1843) / Thomas Carayle
From Outlines of Astronomy (1849) / Sir John Herschell
From Experimental Researches in Electricity (1839-55) (1852) / Michael Faraday
On the Age of the Sun's Heat (1862) / William Thomson, Lord Kelvin
On Chemical Rays, and the Light of the Sky (1869)
On the Scientific Use of the Imagination (1870) / John Tyndall
From Theory of Heat (1871)
To the Chief Musician upon Nabla: A Tyndallic Ode (1874)
Professor Tait, Loquitur (1877)
Answer to Tait
To Hermann Stoffkraft (1878) / James Clerk Maxwell
The Sorting Demon of Maxwell (1879) / William Thomson, Lord Kelvin
From Two on a Tower (1882) / Thomas Hardy
The Photographic Eyes of Science (1883) / Richard A. Proctor
On a New Kind of Rays (1895) / Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen
Telcommunications. Letter to Hon. Levi Woodbury, Secretary of the US Treasury, 27 September 1837 / Samuel F.B. Morse
The Telephone from Westminster Review (1878) / Anonymous
Mental Telegraphy (1891) / Mark Twain
The Deep-Sea Cables (1896) / Rudyard Kipling
In the Cage (1898) / Henry James
Bodies and Machines. From On the Economy of Machinery and Manufactures (1832) / Charles Babbage
From Dombey and Son (1847-8) / Charles Dickens
On the Conservation of Force (1847) / Hermann Von Helmholtz
From Erewhon (1872) / Samuel Butler
To a Locomotive in Winter (1876) / Walt Whitman
SCIENCES OF THE BODY. Animal Electricity. From De Viribus Electricitatis (1791) / Luigi Galvani
From Discourse, Introductory to a Course of Lectures on Chemistry (1802) / Sir Humphrey Davy
From Frankenstein (1818) / Mary Shelley
I Sing the Body Electric 1855 / Walt Whitman
Cells and Tissues and Their Relation to the Body. From General Anatomy (1801) / Xavier Bichat
From Cellular Pathology (1858) / Rudolf Virchow
From Middlemarch (1871-2) / George Eliot
From the Physical Basis of Mind (1877) / George Henry Lewes
Hygiene, Germ Theory, and Infectious Diseases. From The Last Man (1826) / Mary Shelley
An Inquiry into the Sanitary Condition of the Labouring Population of Great Britain (1842) / Sir Edwin Chadwick
The Mask of the Red Death (1842) / Edgar Allan Poe
The Contagiousness of Puerperal Fever (1843) / Oliver Wendall Holmes
On the Organized Bodies Which Exist in the Atmosphere (1861) / Louis Pasteur
Illustrations of the Antiseptic System (1867) / Sir Joseph Lister
Dr Koch on the Cholera (1884) / Anonymous
The Stolen Bacillus (1895) / H.G. Wells
Experimental Medicine and Vivisection. From An Introduction to the Study of Experimental Medicine (1865) / Claude Bernard
Vivisection: Its Pains and Its Uses (1881) / Sir James Paget
Vivisection and Its Two-Faced Advocates (1882) / Frances Power Cobbe
From Heart and Science (1883) / Wilkie Collins
From The Island of Dr Moreau (1896) / H.G. Wells
EVOLUTION. The Present and the Past.
From Zoological Philosophy (1809) / Jean Baptiste De Lamarck
From Principles of Geology (1830-3) / Sir Charles Lyell
From Philosophy of the Inductive Sciences (1840) / William Whewell
From The Princess (1847) / Alfred, Lord Tennyson
From The Origin of Species (1859) / Charles Darwin
From The Mill on the Floss (1860) / George Eliot
On the Physical Basis of Life (1869) / Thomas Henry Huxley
From The Story of an African Farm (1883) / Olive Schreiner
From Mental Evolution in Man (1888) / George John Romanes
The Individual and the Species. From In Memoriam, LIII-LV, CXVIII (1850) / Alfred, Lord Tennyson
From Principles of Biology (1864-7) / Herbert Spencer
Hap (1866)
From A Pair of Blue Eyes (1873) / Thomas Hardy
From The Evolution of Man (1874) / Ernst Haeckel
From Unconscious Memory (1880) / Samuel Butler
Evolution (1880)
To Nature / Emily Pfeiffer
From Essays on Heredity (1881-5) / August Weismann
Lay of the Trilobite (1885) / May Kendall
Nature is a Heraclitean Fire (1888) / Gerard Manley Hopkins
Sexual Selection. From Pride and Prejudice (1813) / Jane Austen
From The Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex (1871) / Charles Darwin
From She (1887) / Henry Rider Haggard
Natural Selection (1887) / Constance Naden
From Tess of the D'Urbervilles (1891) / Thomas Hardy
SCIENCES OF THE MIND. The Relationship between Mind and Body.
From Confessions of an English Opium-Eater (1822) / Thomas De Quincey
On the Reflex Function (1833) / Marshall Hall
From A Treatise on Insanity (1835) / James Cowles Prichard
The Birthmark (1846) / Nathaniel Hawthorne
From bartleby the Scrivener (1856) / Herman Melville
From Mind and Brain (1860) / Thomas Laycock
From Lady Audley's Secret (1862) / Mary Elizabeth Braddon
The Case of George Dedlow (1866) / S. Weir Mitchell
From Body and Mind (1870) / Henry Maudsley
From Principles of Mental Physiology (1874) / William B. Carpenter
From Principles of Psychology (1890) / William James
Physiognomy and Phrenology. From Elements of Phrenology (1824) / George Combe
From Phrenology in Connection with the Study of Physiognomy (1826) / Johann Gaspar Spurzheim
From Jane Eyre (1847) / Charlotte Brontë
From The Lifted Veil (1859) / Geroge Eliot
Mesmerism and Magnetism. From Facts in Mesmerism (1840) / Chauncey Hare Townsend
From Surgical Operations without Pain in the Mesmeric State (1843) / John Elliotson
Mesmeric Revelation (1844) / Edgar Allan Poe
From Letters on Mesmerism (1845) / Harriet Martineau
From Mesmerism in India (1847) / James Esdaile
Mesmerism (1855) / Robert Browning
From The Moonstone (1868) / Wilkie Collins
Dreams and the Unconscious. When Thou Sleepest (1837) / Charlotte Brontë
Unconscious Cerebration: A Psychological Study (1871) / Frances Power Cobbe
From The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1886) / Robert Louis Stevenson
Address to the German Chemical Society (1890) / August Kenkule
Nervous Exhaustion. From Elsie Venner (1861) / Oliver Wendell Holmes
From Wear and Tear, or Hints for the Overworked (1872) / S. Weir Mitchell
The Yellow Wall-Paper (1892) / Charlotte Perkins Gilman
SOCIAL SCIENCES. Creating the Social Sciences.
From Panopticon (1791)
From Manual of Political Economy (1793) / Jeremy Bentham
From An Essay on the Principle of Population (1798) / Thomas Malthus
From A Dictionary, Practical, Theoretical, and Historical of Commerce and Commercial Navigation (1832) / J.R. M'Culloch
From Bleak House (1852-3) / Charles Dickens
From Positive Philosophy (1853) / Auguste Comte
From Hard Times (1854) / Charles Dickens
From Utilitarianism (1861) / John Stuart Mill
From Jude the Obscure (1895) / Thomas Hardy
Race Science. From The Races of Men (1850) / Robert Knox
From Inquiries into Human Faculty and Its Development (1883) / Sir Francis Galton
The Yellow Face (1894) / Arthur Conan Doyle
Urban Poverty. From The Condition of the Working Class in England (1845) / Friedrich Engels
From London Labour and the London Poor (1851) / Henry Mayhew
From North and South (1855) / Elizabeth Gaskell
East London (1867)
West London / Matthew Arnold
Autobiography of a Thief in Thieves' Language (1879) / J.W. Horsley
From Mrs Warren's Profession (1898) / George Bernard Shaw
From East London (1899) / Walter Besant
Degeneration. From The Criminal Man (1876) / Cesare Lombroso
From The Nether World (1889) / George Gissing
From The Picture of Dorian Gray (1890) / Oscar Wilde
From Degeneration (1892) / Max Nordau
From The Heavenly Twins (1893) / Sarah Grand
From Dracula (1897) / Bram Stoker
EPILOGUE: SCIENCE AND LITERATURE. Prose and Verse (1857) / Sir John Herschel

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Pages
575

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Literature and Science in the Nineteenth Century
2009, Oxford University Press
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Literature and science in the nineteenth century: an anthology
2002, Oxford University Press
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Literature and Science in the Nineteenth Century: An Anthology
2002, Oxford University Press
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Table of Contents

LITERATURE AND SCIENCE IN THE NINETEENTH CENTURY. PROLOGUE: LITERATURE AND SCIENCE.
Sonnet---To Science (1829) / Edgar Allan Poe
The Belfast Address (1874) / John Tyndall
From Science and Culture (1880) / Thomas Henry Huxley
Literature and Science (1882) / Matthew Arnold
MATHEMATICS, PHYSICAL SCIENCE, AND TECHNOLOGY. Mathematics.
Sketch of the Analytical Engine (1843) / Ada Lovelace
From Formal Logic (1847) / Augustus De Morgan
From An Investigation of the Laws of Thought (1854) / George Boole
From The Logic of Chance (1866) / John Venn
From Through the Looking-Glass (1871)
From The Game of Logic (1886) / Lewis Carroll
From Daniel Deronda (1876) / George Eliot
From The Time Machine (1895) / H.G. Wells
Physical Science. From On the Power of Penetrating into Space by Telescopes (1800) / Sir William Herschel
From Past and Present (1843) / Thomas Carayle
From Outlines of Astronomy (1849) / Sir John Herschell
From Experimental Researches in Electricity (1839-55) (1852) / Michael Faraday
On the Age of the Sun's Heat (1862) / William Thomson, Lord Kelvin
On Chemical Rays, and the Light of the Sky (1869)
On the Scientific Use of the Imagination (1870) / John Tyndall
From Theory of Heat (1871)
To the Chief Musician upon Nabla: A Tyndallic Ode (1874)
Professor Tait, Loquitur (1877)
Answer to Tait
To Hermann Stoffkraft (1878) / James Clerk Maxwell
The Sorting Demon of Maxwell (1879) / William Thomson, Lord Kelvin
From Two on a Tower (1882) / Thomas Hardy
The Photographic Eyes of Science (1883) / Richard A. Proctor
On a New Kind of Rays (1895) / Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen
Telcommunications. Letter to Hon. Levi Woodbury, Secretary of the US Treasury, 27 September 1837 / Samuel F.B. Morse
The Telephone from Westminster Review (1878) / Anonymous
Mental Telegraphy (1891) / Mark Twain
The Deep-Sea Cables (1896) / Rudyard Kipling
In the Cage (1898) / Henry James
Bodies and Machines. From On the Economy of Machinery and Manufactures (1832) / Charles Babbage
From Dombey and Son (1847-8) / Charles Dickens
On the Conservation of Force (1847) / Hermann Von Helmholtz
From Erewhon (1872) / Samuel Butler
To a Locomotive in Winter (1876) / Walt Whitman
SCIENCES OF THE BODY. Animal Electricity. From De Viribus Electricitatis (1791) / Luigi Galvani
From Discourse, Introductory to a Course of Lectures on Chemistry (1802) / Sir Humphrey Davy
From Frankenstein (1818) / Mary Shelley
I Sing the Body Electric [1855] (1867) / Walt Whitman
Cells and Tissues and Their Relation to the Body. From General Anatomy (1801) / Xavier Bichat
From Cellular Pathology (1858) / Rudolf Virchow
From Middlemarch (1871-2) / George Eliot
From the Physical Basis of Mind (1877) / George Henry Lewes
Hygiene, Germ Theory, and Infectious Diseases. From The Last Man (1826) / Mary Shelley
An Inquiry into the Sanitary Condition of the Labouring Population of Great Britain (1842) / Sir Edwin Chadwick
The Mask of the Red Death (1842) / Edgar Allan Poe
The Contagiousness of Puerperal Fever (1843) / Oliver Wendall Holmes
On the Organized Bodies Which Exist in the Atmosphere (1861) / Louis Pasteur
Illustrations of the Antiseptic System (1867) / Sir Joseph Lister
Dr Koch on the Cholera (1884) / Anonymous
The Stolen Bacillus (1895) / H.G. Wells
Experimental Medicine and Vivisection. From An Introduction to the Study of Experimental Medicine (1865) / Claude Bernard
Vivisection: Its Pains and Its Uses (1881) / Sir James Paget
Vivisection and Its Two-Faced Advocates (1882) / Frances Power Cobbe
From Heart and Science (1883) / Wilkie Collins
From The Island of Dr Moreau (1896) / H.G. Wells
EVOLUTION. The Present and the Past.
From Zoological Philosophy (1809) / Jean Baptiste De Lamarck
From Principles of Geology (1830-3) / Sir Charles Lyell
From Philosophy of the Inductive Sciences (1840) / William Whewell
From The Princess (1847) / Alfred, Lord Tennyson
From The Origin of Species (1859) / Charles Darwin
From The Mill on the Floss (1860) / George Eliot
On the Physical Basis of Life (1869) / Thomas Henry Huxley
From The Story of an African Farm (1883) / Olive Schreiner
From Mental Evolution in Man (1888) / George John Romanes
The Individual and the Species. From In Memoriam, LIII-LV, CXVIII (1850) / Alfred, Lord Tennyson
From Principles of Biology (1864-7) / Herbert Spencer
Hap (1866)
From A Pair of Blue Eyes (1873) / Thomas Hardy
From The Evolution of Man (1874) / Ernst Haeckel
From Unconscious Memory (1880) / Samuel Butler
Evolution (1880)
To Nature / Emily Pfeiffer
From Essays on Heredity (1881-5) / August Weismann
Lay of the Trilobite (1885) / May Kendall
Nature is a Heraclitean Fire (1888) / Gerard Manley Hopkins
Sexual Selection. From Pride and Prejudice (1813) / Jane Austen
From The Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex (1871) / Charles Darwin
From She (1887) / Henry Rider Haggard
Natural Selection (1887) / Constance Naden
From Tess of the D'Urbervilles (1891) / Thomas Hardy
SCIENCES OF THE MIND. The Relationship between Mind and Body.
From Confessions of an English Opium-Eater (1822) / Thomas De Quincey
On the Reflex Function (1833) / Marshall Hall
From A Treatise on Insanity (1835) / James Cowles Prichard
The Birthmark (1846) / Nathaniel Hawthorne
From bartleby the Scrivener (1856) / Herman Melville
From Mind and Brain (1860) / Thomas Laycock
From Lady Audley's Secret (1862) / Mary Elizabeth Braddon
The Case of George Dedlow (1866) / S. Weir Mitchell
From Body and Mind (1870) / Henry Maudsley
From Principles of Mental Physiology (1874) / William B. Carpenter
From Principles of Psychology (1890) / William James
Physiognomy and Phrenology. From Elements of Phrenology (1824) / George Combe
From Phrenology in Connection with the Study of Physiognomy (1826) / Johann Gaspar Spurzheim
From Jane Eyre (1847) / Charlotte Brontë
From The Lifted Veil (1859) / Geroge Eliot
Mesmerism and Magnetism. From Facts in Mesmerism (1840) / Chauncey Hare Townsend
From Surgical Operations without Pain in the Mesmeric State (1843) / John Elliotson
Mesmeric Revelation (1844) / Edgar Allan Poe
From Letters on Mesmerism (1845) / Harriet Martineau
From Mesmerism in India (1847) / James Esdaile
Mesmerism (1855) / Robert Browning
From The Moonstone (1868) / Wilkie Collins
Dreams and the Unconscious. When Thou Sleepest (1837) / Charlotte Brontë
Unconscious Cerebration: A Psychological Study (1871) / Frances Power Cobbe
From The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1886) / Robert Louis Stevenson
Address to the German Chemical Society (1890) / August Kenkule
Nervous Exhaustion. From Elsie Venner (1861) / Oliver Wendell Holmes
From Wear and Tear, or Hints for the Overworked (1872) / S. Weir Mitchell
The Yellow Wall-Paper (1892) / Charlotte Perkins Gilman
SOCIAL SCIENCES. Creating the Social Sciences.
From Panopticon (1791)
From Manual of Political Economy (1793) / Jeremy Bentham
From An Essay on the Principle of Population (1798) / Thomas Malthus
From A Dictionary, Practical, Theoretical, and Historical of Commerce and Commercial Navigation (1832) / J.R. M'Culloch
From Bleak House (1852-3) / Charles Dickens
From Positive Philosophy (1853) / Auguste Comte
From Hard Times (1854) / Charles Dickens
From Utilitarianism (1861) / John Stuart Mill
From Jude the Obscure (1895) / Thomas Hardy
Race Science. From The Races of Men (1850) / Robert Knox
From Inquiries into Human Faculty and Its Development (1883) / Sir Francis Galton
The Yellow Face (1894) / Arthur Conan Doyle
Urban Poverty. From The Condition of the Working Class in England (1845) / Friedrich Engels
From London Labour and the London Poor (1851) / Henry Mayhew
From North and South (1855) / Elizabeth Gaskell
East London (1867)
West London / Matthew Arnold
Autobiography of a Thief in Thieves' Language (1879) / J.W. Horsley
From Mrs Warren's Profession (1898) / George Bernard Shaw
From East London (1899) / Walter Besant
Degeneration. From The Criminal Man (1876) / Cesare Lombroso
From The Nether World (1889) / George Gissing
From The Picture of Dorian Gray (1890) / Oscar Wilde
From Degeneration (1892) / Max Nordau
From The Heavenly Twins (1893) / Sarah Grand
From Dracula (1897) / Bram Stoker
EPILOGUE: SCIENCE AND LITERATURE. Prose and Verse (1857) / Sir John Herschel

Edition Notes

Published in
Oxford
Series
Oxford World's Classics
Copyright Date
2002

Classifications

Library of Congress
PR1111.S3 L58 2009

The Physical Object

Format
Paperback
Pagination
xlii, 575p.
Number of pages
575

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL26089385M
Internet Archive
literaturescienc0000unse_n2b4
ISBN 10
019955465X
ISBN 13
9780199554652
Goodreads
6957377

First Sentence

"John Tyndall called imagination 'the mightiest instrument of the physical discoverer'."

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April 8, 2024 Edited by AgentSapphire merge authors
March 6, 2023 Edited by AgentSapphire merge authors
November 27, 2022 Edited by mheimanbot Fixed author redirect
November 27, 2021 Edited by Lisa Edited without comment.
December 9, 2009 Created by WorkBot add works page