Chance and providence in the thought of William Paley

The influential popular writer William Paley articulated his attitude toward chance and disorder in his landmark work <i>Natural Theology</i>, published in 1802. This work shaped many early nineteenth-century attitudes toward biology and teleology, and significantly influenced the recept...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: McGrath, AE
Other Authors: Giberson, KW
Format: Book section
Language:English
Published: Oxford University Press 2016
Description
Summary:The influential popular writer William Paley articulated his attitude toward chance and disorder in his landmark work <i>Natural Theology</i>, published in 1802. This work shaped many early nineteenth-century attitudes toward biology and teleology, and significantly influenced the reception of Darwin’s ideas. Paley takes a strongly negative attitude toward the idea of chance. To understand him, his ideas must be set against the views of the early 1700s, when the enterprise of natural theology emphasized the orderliness of the world, which “chance” appeared to subvert. Paley was part of the process of cultural solidification, which rendered the later acceptance of indeterminism more problematic.