Biology Reference
In-Depth Information
43
Émile Durkheim,
Pragmatism and Sociology
, trans. J. C. Whitehouse, ed. John
B. Allcock (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1983), 91.
44
René Girard,
Things Hidden since the Foundation of the World
, trans. Stephen
Bann and Michael Metteer (Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press, 1987),
32.
45
G. Thomas Goodnight, “The Personal, Technical, and Public Spheres of
Argument: A Speculative Inquiry into the Art of Public Deliberation,”
Journal
of the American Forensic Association
18 (1982): 214-27.
46
Karl Mannheim,
Ideology and Utopia: An Introduction to the Sociology of Knowl-
edge
, trans. Louis Wirth and Edward Shils
(New York: Harcourt, Brace &
World, 1936), 125.
47
Thomas M. Lessl, “Incommensurate Boundaries: The Rhetorical Positivism
of Thomas Huxley,” in
Rhetoric and Incommensurability
, ed. Randy Allen Harris
(West Lafayette, Ind.: Parlor, 2005), 198-237.
48
Hayden White,
Tropics of Discourse: Essays in Cultural Criticism
(Baltimore, Md.:
Johns Hopkins University Press, 1978), 88.
49
Dawkins,
Ancestor's Tal e
, 8.
50
White,
Tropics of Discourse
, 88.
51
Northrop Frye,
Anatomy
of Criticism: Four Essays
(Princeton, N.J.: Princeton
University Press, 1957), 187.
52
Frye,
Anatomy of Criticism
, 187.
53
Bronowski,
Ascent
, 24.
54
Bronowski,
Ascent
, 56.
55
For a summary of these patterns of historical misrepresentation, see Thomas
M. Lessl, “The Galileo Legend as Scientific Folklore,”
Quarterly Journal of
Speech
85 (Spring 1999): 146-68.
56
Hayden White,
The Content of the Form : Narrative Discourse and Historical Rep-
resentation
(Baltimore, Md.: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1987).
57
Bronowski,
Ascent
, 202, 205.
58
Giorgio de Santillana,
The Crime of Galileo
(Chicago: University of Chicago
Press, 1955).
59
Bronowski,
Ascent
, 218.
60
Bronowski,
Ascent
, 437.
61
The following represent just a small sample of the historical studies that have
explored this relationship: John Hedley Brooke,
Science and Religion: Some His-
torical Perspectives
(Cambridge: University of Cambridge Press, 1991);
John
Hedley Brooke,
Reconstructing Nature: The Engagement of Science and Religion
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000); Reijer Hooykaas,
Religion and the
Rise of Modern Science
(Edinburgh, U.K.: Scottish Academic, 1972); Reijer