George John Romanes, close friend and colleague of Darwin, remains a misunderstood figure in the history of evolutionary science. Although his scientific contributions have been valued, his religious journey has been either neglected or misjudged. Scholars typically only acknowledge some of the work on theism he did at the very end of his life and usually blame his wife for doctoring the record with her pieties. Romanes's extensive poetry writing, much of it religious, has never been explored and his Memorial Poem to Darwin has been completely overlooked. The recent discovery of the original typescript of the poem, lost for more than a century and reprinted in this book for the first time, allows us to enter the mind of a major Darwinian as we watch him struggle to reconcile faith and science on a positive basis.
George John Romanes, close friend and colleague of Darwin, remains a misunderstood figure in the history of evolutionary science. Although his scientific contributions have been valued, his religious journey has been either neglected or misjudged. Scholars typically only acknowledge some of the work on theism he did at the very end of his life and usually blame his wife for doctoring the record with her pieties. Romanes's extensive poetry writing, much of it religious, has never been explored and his Memorial Poem to Darwin has been completely overlooked. The recent discovery of the original typescript of the poem, lost for more than a century and reprinted in this book for the first time, allows us to enter the mind of a major Darwinian as we watch him struggle to reconcile faith and science on a positive basis.
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Preface: Hidden for a Century
Acknowledgments
List of Illustrations
1 A Candid Examination of Theism: The Evolution of a Skeptic
2 The Tolling of the Funeral Bell: The Death of Charles Darwin
3 To Sleep Beneath Thy Sacred Floor: Darwin’s Funeral and a
Revelation of Light
4 A Deathless Name: The Paradox of Fame
5 Treasures of the Heart: Memories of Down House
6 The Elemental War: Devilry and Harmony
7 Intuition of the Infinite: The Evolution of a Seeker
Chart: Typescript and Poems 1879-1889: Comparison of Poem
Numbers
Appendix: Charles Darwin: A Memorial Poem
Notes
Bibliography
Index
An exploration of a major Darwinian and his struggle to find a positive basis to put together faith and science.
J. David Pleins is Professor of Religious Studies at Santa Clara University, USA. He is the author of The Evolving God (2013), When the Great Abyss Opened: Classic and Contemporary Readings of Noah's Flood (2003), and served as an associate editor for Doubleday's The Anchor Bible Dictionary (six volumes, 1992).
This is an extraordinary book. The author, with meticulous
attention to detail, traces the historical and spiritual journey of
one of Charles Darwin’s most fervent admirers, George Romanes. But
it is Romanes’s movement from unbelief to faith in the context of
Darwin’s death that is, perhaps, of most significance in a
post-Darwinian world plagued by skepticism about whether belief in
God is ever possible. … Woven into this account Pleins puts in a
number of interesting details, including a reconstruction of
Darwin’s house, the reading material that likely influenced
Romanes, as well as specific struggles of more general importance.
… Overall, the impression one has from reading this book is that
Romanes was a conflicted and complicated man, racked by an
obsessive attachment to Darwin, whose death left a void that he
sought to fill through many and various religious alternatives.
*Journal of Religion volume 96/1, January 2016*
Pleins’s book doesn’t focus on Romanes as an individual site of the
conflict between faith and science. Instead, his book focuses on
Romanes’s “Memorial Poem,” written in praise of Darwin at the time
of Darwin’s death. The lengthy poem was lost to the public for over
a century, only an abridged version published. It is reprinted here
in an appendix, and Pleins spends most of the book analyzing
it.
*First Things*
Pleins’s lovingly attentive account of the poem is very helpful in
teasing out its engagement with theological questions, Biblical
sources, biographical events and Darwinian evolution.
*Reports of the National Center for Science Education*
Some books do not fit neatly into genre categories. J. David Pleins
offers us an excellent example of a multidisciplinary work with In
Praise of Darwin. It is part history, part literary critique, part
philosophy, and part theology.
*Perspectives on Science and Christian Faith*
[In Praise of Darwin] will interest all Darwin scholars and anyone
thinking through the wider significance of evolution for Christian
belief ... David Pleins must take his share of the credit for
putting this Memorial Poem into print together with his own
excellent, extensive and illuminating analysis.
*Faith and Thought*
[A] meticulous examination, quatrain by quatrain, of Romanes's
poems ... [Pleins] presents a thoughtful and instructive reading of
Victorian poetry, writing clearly and following the poem and his
subject conscientiously.
*Isis Journal*
This is a remarkable follow-up to the author’s earlier work on
Darwin’s journey of faith, The Evolving God. Pleins has an
exceptional sensitivity to the religious struggles of sincere
seekers, especially scientists. Like Tennyson, he realizes that
‘there lives more faith in honest doubt. . . than in half the
creeds.’ The journey into skepticism by some scientifically
educated Christians was especially tormenting since it seemed to
estrange them agonizingly from family members and friends. Instead
of viewing the loss of faith as liberation from authoritarianism,
many literate people, once they had been exposed to science and
‘reason,’ remained deeply tormented that they could no longer share
the comforts of faith with the people they loved most. Darwin is a
good example. George Romanes may be an even better one. We could
hardly expect a more careful and scholarly treatment of Romanes’s
struggle than we have in Pleins’s readable work.
*John Haught, Professor Emeritus, Science and Religion, Georgetown
University, USA*
In this fascinating re-investigation of the life and thought of
George Romanes, the author weaves together insights from Romanes’
magisterial Memorial Poem with material arising from his
interactions with his hero Charles Darwin, to generate a narrative
that subverts any simplistic ‘science versus religion’
historiography. The text is often counter-intuitive, full of
surprises, and should be read by all those interested in the impact
that Darwinian ideas had on the religious convictions of his
contemporaries.
*Denis Alexander, Emeritus Director of The Faraday Institute for
Science and Religion, St Edmund's College, Cambridge, UK*
Whilst Tennyson’s poetic musings of Darwinian evolution in In
Memoriam are now well-known enough to have passed into cliché
(“Nature red in tooth and claw”), George Romanes’ Charles Darwin: A
Memorial Poem by contrast has faded into obscurity. Now, thanks to
J. David Pleins’ excellent new book, Romanes’ poem can assume its
rightfully central place in our assessment of the reception of
Darwin’s scientific theories and their impact on religious belief.
A combination of the fortuitous discovery of the original
typescript of Romanes’ poem and meticulous historical scholarship,
Pleins’ book guides us through the poem as key to Romanes’
remarkable scientific and religious thought. Detailed, nuanced and
lively, the book breaks new ground in the study of Romanes and his
relation to his mentor Darwin; it also contributes significantly to
wider historical work on the inter-relations of science and
religion in the nineteenth century, cutting through the tired
metaphors of warfare and conflict towards a more subtle account of
the intellectual negotiations of those, like Romanes, immersed in
both modern science and modern religion.
*Russell Re Manning, Lord Gifford Fellow in the School of Divinity,
History and Philosophy, University of Aberdeen, UK*
The recently discovered and slightly longer Typescript of the poem
provides what Pleins views as a fresh means to examine Romanes’s
transitions from youthful faith to Darwinian skepticism, to a
supposedly new belief strengthened by understanding evolution. For
the author, Romanes is a champion of a particular, personal, and
creative reconciliation of science and religion. The book is mostly
a meticulous examination, quatrain by quatrain, of Romanes’s poem,
including handwritten marginalia, deletions, and additions. … A
professor of religious studies at Santa Clara University, Pleins is
… writing for the theological community, not for historians of
science. … This of course does not mean Pleins should not be read
by interested historians of science. He often presents a thoughtful
and instructive reading of Victorian poetry, writing clearly and
following the poem and his subject conscientiously. And is it a bad
thing, when many in the United States are still trying to ban the
teaching of evolution, to learn of a Darwinian who could openly
grapple with his faith and seek and possibly find reconciliation,
while still studying natural selection?
*Isis: A Journal of the History of Science Society, Volume 106,
Number 4, December 2015*
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