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Of The Plurality Of Worlds



This essay, first published anonymously in 1853, addresses the question of the existence of intelligent life on other planets. The author, William Whewell, was a leading intellectual of the Victorian period and a notable polymath. He wrote extensively on subjects ranging from astronomy and mineralogy to moral philosophy, educational reform and architecture. Whewell engaged with John Stuart Mill in... more details
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  • William Whewell engages in a lively debate with John Stuart Mill about the probability of life elsewhere in the universe
  • In Of The Plurality of Worlds, Whewell denies the probability of life elsewhere in the universe fearing that the concept of extraterrestrial life would encourage the theory of evolution and put at risk mankind's connection to God


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This essay, first published anonymously in 1853, addresses the question of the existence of intelligent life on other planets. The author, William Whewell, was a leading intellectual of the Victorian period and a notable polymath. He wrote extensively on subjects ranging from astronomy and mineralogy to moral philosophy, educational reform and architecture. Whewell engaged with John Stuart Mill in a lively debate about inductive reasoning. In Of The Plurality of Worlds, Whewell denied the probability of life elsewhere in the universe, fearing that the concept of extraterrestrial life would encourage the theory of evolution and put at risk mankind's connection to God.

This controversial essay, first published in 1853, addresses the question of the existence of intelligent life on other planets. It was first published anonymously, owing to the ferocity of the ongoing debates between the religious and scientific scholarly communities. Its author, William Whewell (1794-1866) was a leading intellectual of the Victorian period, and a notable polymath. A contemporary and adviser of Herschel, Darwin and Faraday, he wrote extensively on subjects ranging from astronomy and mineralogy to moral philosophy, educational reform and architecture, and engaged with John Stuart Mill in a lively debate about inductive reasoning. In Of The Plurality of Worlds, Whewell denied the probability of life elsewhere in the universe, afraid that the concept of extraterrestrial life would encourage the theory of evolution and put at risk mankind's connection to God.
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