Affiliation:
1. Honorary Research Fellow, School of Earth Sciences, University of Bristol, Wills Memorial Building, Queen’s Road, Bristol BS8 1RJ (e-mail: cherry.lewis@bristol.ac.uk)
Abstract
AbstractThis paper presents a new look at how the apothecary surgeon, James Parkinson (1755–1824), integrated his geological understanding with his religious ideas. It is only through the intellectual questions raised by the emerging science of geology that we are able to examine his religious beliefs as these were not apparently challenged by, and consequently not discussed in, any of his other published works on politics, medicine or chemistry. Although Parkinson held ‘conventional’ Christian beliefs prevailing at the time, he did not permit these to stand in the way of the geological evidence; his later private views regarding how the Creation story came about were never fully revealed in his publications. By accepting that a ‘system of successive creations’ had occurred, which circumvented certain aspects of the biblical account of Creation, he adapted his faith to accommodate the indisputable facts of geology, concurring with then modern views about how the Earth had formed.
Publisher
Geological Society of London
Subject
Geology,Ocean Engineering,Water Science and Technology
Reference13 articles.
1. De Luc J.-A. (1779) Lettres physics et morales sur l’Histoire de la Terre et de l’Homme. Adressées à la Reine de la Grande Bretagne (The Hague, Paris), 5.
2. Gardner-Thorpe C. (1987) James Parkinson 1755–1824 (A. Wheaton and Co. Ltd. Exeter).
3. Doctoring geology: the medical origins of the Geological Society
4. ‘Our favourite science’: Lord Bute and James Parkinson searching for a Theory of the Earth
5. Moore W. (2005) The Knife Man (Bantam Books, London).
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
1. A Tribute to James Parkinson;Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences / Journal Canadien des Sciences Neurologiques;2017-11-16
2. The obstetrician, the surgeon and the premature birth of the world's first dinosaur: William Hunter and James Parkinson;Geological Society, London, Special Publications;2017