In 1864, amid headline-grabbing heresy trials, members of the British Association for the Advancement of Science were asked to sign a declaration affirming that science and scripture were in agreement. Many criticized the new test of orthodoxy; nine decided that collaborative action was required. The X Club tells their story.
These six ambitious professionals and three wealthy amateurs – J. D. Hooker, T. H. Huxley, John Tyndall, John Lubbock, William Spottiswoode, Edward Frankland, George Busk, T. A. Hirst, and Herbert Spencer – wanted to guide the development of science and public opinion on issues where science impinged on daily life, religious belief, and politics. They formed a private dining club, which they named the X Club, to discuss and further their plans. As Ruth Barton shows, they had a clear objective: they wanted to promote "scientific habits of mind", which they sought to do through lectures, journalism, and science education. They devoted enormous effort to the expansion of science education, with real, but mixed, success.
For twenty years, the X Club was the most powerful network in Victorian science – the men succeeded each other in the presidency of the Royal Society for a dozen years. Barton's group biography traces the roots of their success and the lasting effects of their championing of science against those who attempted to limit or control it, along the way shedding light on the social organization of science, the interactions of science and the state, and the places of science and scientific men in elite culture in the Victorian era.
List of Illustrations
Introduction: The X Club 1864–92
I.1 Nine Men Who Wanted to Change the World
I.2 Historians of the X Club
I.3 Introducing This Book
Part 1 Origins and Ambitions
Chapter 1 Cultures of Science in Early Victorian England
1.1 Gentlemanly London Science
1.2 Science for Self-Improvement: Frankland, Tyndall, and Hirst
1.3 Spencer and Huxley: The Science and Politics of Rational Dissent
1.4 Spottiswoode at Oxford: A Liberal Education for a Christian Gentleman
1.5 Scientific Aspirations, Social Status, and Religious Beliefs
Chapter 2 Making Careers
2.1 Finding Employment: Patronage and Pluralism
2.2 Scientific Expertise and Gentlemanly Status
2.3 A Taste for Campaigning
2.4 Friends
Chapter 3 Speaking for Nature
3.1 Defending Darwin and Expanding the Domain of Nature
3.2 Alliances: Naturalistic Science and Liberal Theology
3.3 The Science of Man: Ethnologists against Anthropologists
3.4 The Reader: A Liberal Alliance and Its Collapse
3.5 Friends and Conspirators
Part 2 The X Club Established
Chapter 4 Organizing Science
4.1 Specialist Societies
4.2 The British Association: Representing Science to the Nation
4.3 The Royal Society: Power and Its Symbolic Uses
4.4 Men of Weight, of Craft, and of Party
Chapter 5 Public Money and the Public Good
5.1 Science in the Curriculum I: Examination Successes
5.2 Science in the Curriculum II: Lobbying Failures
5.3 Money and Advice: The Reciprocal Relations of Science and Government
5.4 Hirst’s Career: Higher Education and London Life
5.5 Good and Influential Men
Chapter 6 Claiming Cultural Authority
6.1 Self-Images
6.2 Science Militant
6.3 Insiders: Scientific Men at Home among the Social Elite
6.4 Pulpits for Science
6.5 The Rhetoric of Scientific Authority
6.6 Sunday Lecture Societies: The Politics of Lay Sermons
6.7 Cultural Leaders
Retrospective The Life, Work, and Times of the X Club
R.1 Phases of Power and Friendship, 1860–1900
R.2 The X Club Program: The Authority and Independence of Science and Scientific Men
R.3 Victorian Science and Victorian Culture
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Ruth Barton taught history at the University of Auckland; social science methodology at Curtin University of Technology in Perth, Western Australia; and mathematics at Victoria University of Wellington.