The Royal Institution of Great Britain, 1840-1873
Abstract
The Royal Institution is generally thought of as an institution
devoted solely to scientific research and the Popular exposition of
science. In the mid-nineteenth century however it had a wider range
of objectives and activities, and should be considered within the
framework of the organisation of learning and culture as a whole of
which science was still an integral part. In the 1840s it acted as
an authority on practical science; it provided both specialised
scientific education and what was then termed useful knowledge; it
supported experimental scientific research; and it was a literary
and philosophical society of an eighteenth-century type, devoted to
the cultivation of humane learning in general. As the unity of
learning disintegratedv the R. I. was forced to reassess its
activities and decide which ought to be its most important function.
Formal educative activities were reluctantly abandoned. Prom the
early 1850s and more enthusiastically in the 1860s, scientific
research was recognized to be its prime function, At the same time
its management passed for the first time into the hands of scientific
men and any possibility of support from outside interests warded off
by a new insistence that research at the Institution must be purely
disinterested and independent. Paradoxically however, its nonscientific
activities received greater attention than ever before,
which may be linked to changes in the Institutionts membership and
to ideas of cultivated entertainment. These developments made the
1860s not only a "golden age" of success and popularity, but the
decisive decade in fixing the activities and ethos of the Institution
for the next hundred years,
Authors
Forgan, A.S.Collections
- Theses [3928]