English Men of Science

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19th Century
A01=Francis Galton
Assured Revenues
Author_Francis Galton
Benjamin Latrobe
biostatistics
British Association
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Category=PDX
Christian Ignatius Latrobe
Deserve Notice
Direct Practical Interest
Edwin Hill
English scientific men
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Francis Palgrave
General Eminence
Good Verbal Memory
Great Dissimilarity
hereditary intelligence studies
Inclined
Industrial Revolution
Innate Taste
Invention
Large Family
Mechanical Aptitude
mental heredity
Modern Languages
Natural Taste
Peculiar Merits
physical science
psychological research
psychological research methods
Religious Bias
scientific achievement analysis
Scientific History
Scientific Men
Scientific Tastes
Scientists
Senior Wrangler
Sir Francis Palgrave
statistical study of scientists
Victorian science history
Victorian scientific intelligentsia
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367074593
  • Weight: 550g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Aug 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This edition first published in 1970. Francis Galton has been honoured as the founder of biostatics and one of the creators of modern psychology. His principal aim was to establish a body of statistical knowledge about mental heredity which would result in a new pattern of behaviour for society. The relationship between outstanding men had led him to conclude that mental traits are inherited, and that an ideal society would take advantage of this "fact". In this particular work, which he termed a "Natural History of the English Men of Science of the present day", he examined at great length the antecedents, environment, education and hereditary features of the most prominent men of science in order to establish certain laws relating to heredity. It is a landmark in the transition from introspective to objective methods in biological and psychological research, and the author’s statistical, nonanecdotal approach was to prove immensely fruitful for the development of psychology. Indeed the questionnaire included in the work is probably the earliest in existence.

As Professor Cowan points out in her introduction, historians as well as scientists intent upon a deeper understanding of the Victorian mind will find much of interest in this remarkable book.

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