D. Raina et Si. Habib, THE MORAL LEGITIMATION OF MODERN SCIENCE - BHADRALOK REFLECTIONS ON THEORIES OF EVOLUTION, Social studies of science, 26(1), 1996, pp. 9-42
Citations number
62
Categorie Soggetti
History & Philosophy of Sciences","History & Philosophy of Sciences","History & Philosophy of Sciences
This paper takes up the discussion of a nineteenth-century theory of s
cience - that of biological evolution - among members of the Indian Na
tional Council of Education, and in the pages of an important journal
called The Dawn, published from Calcutta between 1897 and 1913. It dis
cusses how, toward the turn of the century, science was legitimated as
a morally worthy endeavour among the Bengali Bhadralok community. The
debate pursued in The Dawn was representative of the anxieties and as
pirations of that community, which had embarked upon the project of mo
dernity, and was the first on the Indian continent to take modern West
ern science seriously. The socio-political context of the debate is im
portant, in that the nationalist struggle for freedom from British rul
e was gathering momentum, and received notions of progress and social
evolution were open to questioning and challenge. While colonialism is
a backdrop for this study, the paper's main focus is the act of cultu
ral redefinition of modern science in a non-Western context.