 |
Baden Powell (mathematician) Totally Explained
|
|  |
|
NEW! |
All the latest news in the worlds of
computer gaming,
entertainment,
the environment,
finance,
health,
politics,
science,
stocks & shares,
technology
and much,
much,
more.
|
Everything about Baden Powell Mathematician totally explained
Rev. Baden Powell, MA, FRS, FRGS ( 22 August 1796– 11 June 1860 Kensington, London, England ) was an English mathematician and Church of England priest. He was also prominent as a liberal theologian who put forward advanced ideas about evolution. He held the Savilian Chair of Geometry at the University of Oxford from 1827 to 1860. After his death his family changed their surname to Baden-Powell in his memory.
His son, Sir George Baden-Powell was a politician, and served in the Colonial Service. Another son, Robert Baden-Powell, 1st Baron Baden-Powell, was the founder of the world scouting movement. A third son, Major Baden Baden-Powell was an aviation pioneer and travelled the world extensively. His daughter Agnes Baden-Powell was, with her brother Robert, the founder of the Girl Guide movement.
Family
Professor Baden Powell's first marriage on 21 July 1821 to Eliza Rivaz (died 13 March 1836) was childless.
His second marriage on 27 September 1837 to Charlotte Pope (died 14 October 1844) produced one son and three daughters
His third marriage on 10 March 1846 (at St Luke's Church, Chelsea) with Henrietta Grace Smyth ( 3 September 1824– 13 October 1914), produced seven sons and three daughters, three of whom died in infancy:
Henry Warington Smyth Powell (later Baden-Powell), KC (3 February 1847–24 April 1921)
(Sir) George Smyth Powell (later Baden-Powell), KCMG, MP (24 December 1847–20 November 1898)
Augustus Smyth Powell (1849–1863),
Francis Smyth Powell (later Baden-Powell) (29 July 1850–1931)
Henrietta Smyth Powell (28 October 1851–9 March 1854),
John Penrose Smyth Powell (21 December 1852–14 December 1855),
Jessie Smyth Powell (25 November 1855–24 July 1856),
Robert Stephenson Smyth Powell (later Baden-Powell), 1st Baron Baden-Powell (22 February 1857–8 January 1941)
Agnes Smyth Powell (later Baden-Powell), (16 December 1858–2 June 1945)
(Major) Baden Fletcher Smyth Powell (later Baden-Powell), FS, FRAS, FRMetS (22 May 1860–3 October 1937)
Shortly after the professor's death, the remaining children of his third marriage became 'Baden-Powell'.
Evolution
Powell's views were very liberal, and he was sympathetic to evolutionary theory long before Charles Darwin had revealed his ideas. He argued that science shouldn't be placed next to scripture or the two approaches would conflict, and in his own version of Francis Bacon's dictum, contended that the book of God's works was separate from the book of God's word, claiming that moral and physical phenomena were completely independent.
His faith in the uniformity of nature (except man's mind) was set out in a theological argument; if God is a lawgiver, then a "miracle" would break the lawful edicts that had been issued at Creation. Therefore, a belief in miracles would be entirely atheistic. Powell's most significant works defended, in succession, the uniformitarian geology set out by Charles Lyell and the evolutionary ideas in Vestiges of Creation published anonymously by Robert Chambers which applied uniform laws to the history of life in contrast to more respectable ideas such as catastrophism involving a series of divine creations. }}
This led Joseph Dalton Hooker to comment "These parsons are so in the habit of dealing with the abstraction of doctrines as if there was no difficulty about them whatever... that they gallop over the [science] course... as if we were in the pews and they in the pulpit. Witness the self confident style of...Baden Powell".
Essays and Reviews
He was one of seven liberal theologians who produced a manifesto titled Essays and Reviews around February 1860, which amongst other things joined in the debate over On the Origin of Species. These Anglicans included Oxford professors, country clergymen, the headmaster of Rugby school and a layman. Their declaration that miracles were irrational stirred up unprecedented anger, drawing much of the fire away from Charles Darwin. Essays sold 22,000 copies in two years, more than the Origin sold in twenty years, and sparked five years of increasingly polarised debate with books and pamphlets furiously contesting the issues.
Referring to "Mr Darwin's masterly volume" and restating his argument that belief in miracles is atheistic, Baden Powell wrote that the book "must soon bring about an entire revolution in opinion in favour of the grand principle of the self-evolving powers of nature.":
Just a similar scepticism has been evinced by nearly all the first physiologists of the day, who have joined in rejecting the development theories of Lamarck and the Vestiges; and while they've strenuously maintained successive creations, have denied strenuously maintained successive creations, have denied and denounced the alleged production of organic life by Messrs. Crosse and Weekes, and stoutly maintained the impossibility of spontaneious generation, on the alleged ground of contradiction to experience. Yet it's now acknowledged under the high sanction of the name of Owen (British Association Address 1858), that 'creation' is only another name for our ignorance of the mode of production; and it has been the unanswered and unanswerable argument of another reasoner that new species must have originated either out of their inorganic elements, or out of previously organized forms; either development or spontaneous generation must be true: while a work has now appeared by a naturalist of the most acknowledged authority, Mr. Darwin's masterly volume on The Origin of Species by the law of 'natural selection,' - which now substantiates on undeniable grounds the very principle so long denounced by the first naturalist, - the origination of new species by natural causes: a work which must soon bring about an entire revolution of opinion in favour of the grand principle of the self-evolving powers of nature. |
He would have been on the platform at the legendary British Association for the Advancement of Science 1860 Oxford evolution debate that was a highlight of the reaction to Darwin's theory, but died of a heart attack a fortnight before the meeting.
Notes and references
Further Information
Get more info on 'Baden Powell Mathematician'.
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://baden_powell__mathematician.totallyexplained.com">Baden Powell (mathematician) Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |
|
|