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Animal cunning: deceptive nature and truthful science in Charles Kingsley's Natural theology
Charles Kingsley’s natural theology hinged upon his faith in nature’s “truthfulness.” He conceptualized nature as a divine text that both exemplified truthfulness and preached it symbolically. However, this view was undermined as modern science increasingly revealed ruthless deception and parasitism throughout the organic world. Faced with such seemingly amoral facts, Kingsley often located divine truthfulness less in nature itself than in the naturalist studying it. Yet moralizing scientific habits in this way would ultimately undermine Kingsley’s argument for moral meaning in the natural world. His efforts to conflate moral and factual truth were bound up with his struggle to defend his authority as an interpreter of nature as emerging secular science threatened to both usurp and invalidate this authority.
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Publication status
- Published
Journal
Victorian StudiesISSN
0042-5222Publisher
Indiana University PressPublisher URL
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1Volume
58Department affiliated with
- English Publications
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- No
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- Yes
Legacy Posted Date
2015-09-11Usage metrics
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