Aubrey Moore
Aubrey Moore | |
---|---|
Born | Aubrey Moore 30 March 1848 Camberwell, England |
Died | 17 January 1890 Oxford, England | (aged 41)
Spouse |
Catherine Hunt (m. 1876) |
Ecclesiastical career | |
Religion | Christianity (Anglican) |
Church | Church of England |
Academic background | |
Thomas Hill Green[3] | |
Academic work | |
Discipline |
|
School or tradition | Liberal Anglo-Catholicism[4] |
Institutions |
Aubrey Lackington Moore (1848–1890) was an English Anglo-Catholic priest[4] and one of the first Christian Darwinians. He has been described as "the clergyman who more than any other man was responsible for breaking down the antagonisms towards Evolution then widely felt in the English Church".[5]
Life
Moore was born on 30 March 1848 in Camberwell, England, the second son of Daniel Moore, vicar of Holy Trinity, Paddington, and prebendary of St Paul's.[6]
He was educated at St Paul's School from 1860 to 1867, which he left with an exhibition, matriculating as a commoner of Exeter College, Oxford, 1867, whence, after obtaining first-class honours in classical moderations and literae humaniores, he graduated B.A. in 1871 (M.A. 1874).
He was fellow of
He became examining chaplain to Bishops John Mackarness and William Stubbs of Oxford, select preacher at Oxford 1885–1886, Whitehall preacher 1887–1888, and hon. canon of Christ Church 1887. A few weeks before his death, he accepted an official fellowship as dean of divinity at Magdalen College, Oxford, and when nominated simultaneously to examine in the final honour schools of theology and literae humaniores, accepted the latter post.[7]
He died after a very brief illness on 17 January 1890 and was buried in Holywell Cemetery.[7]
At Oxford, Moore had a unique position as at once a theologian and a philosopher of recognised attainments in natural science, dealing fearlessly with the metaphysical and scientific questions affecting theology. He lectured mainly on philosophy and on the history of the Reformation. Though rendered constitutionally weak by physical deformity, he had great powers of endurance and hard work, was a brilliant talker and preacher, and distinguished as a botanist.[7]
Family
He married in 1876 Catherine, daughter of Frank Hurt, by whom he left three daughters. A fund of nearly £1,000 was subscribed to his memory by friends, from which an 'Aubrey Moore' studentship (for theological research), open to graduates of Oxford, was founded in 1890.[7]
Theology
Moore argued that Darwinism was not in conflict with Christianity. He differed from other religious figures of the time by accepting the theory of natural selection, incorporating it into his Christian beliefs as merely the way God worked. He wrote that evolution
as a theory is infinitely more Christian than the theory of "Special Creation." For it implies the immanence of God in nature, and the omnipresence of His creative power. Those who opposed the doctrine of evolution in defence of "a continued intervention" of God seem to have failed to notice that a theory of occasional intervention implies as its correlative a theory of ordinary absence [emphasis in original].[8]
Moore was curator of the
H. O. Wakeman's History of the Church of England (1897) is dedicated to Moore.[9]
Selected works
- Essays Scientific and Philosophical (1890)
- Evolution and Christianity (1889)
- Lectures and Papers on the History of the Reformation in England and on the Continent (1890)
- Note on the Philosophy of Chuang Tzŭ
- Science and Faith (1893)
- Theology and Law (1884)
References
Citations
- ^ England 1997, p. 97.
- ^ Webb 2010, p. 60.
- ^ England 1997, pp. 4–5, 91.
- ^ a b England 1997, p. i.
- ^ Lane, Christopher (2011). "Christopher Lane on Christian Darwinism," Yale Press Log.
- ^ Blakiston 1894; England 2005.
- ^ a b c d e Blakiston 1894.
- ^ A. Moore 1893, pp. 184–185.
- ^ J. Moore 1910.
Works cited
- Blakiston, H. E. D. (1894). . In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 38. London: Smith, Elder & Co. p. 342. This article incorporates text from this public-domain publication.
- England, Richard (1997). Aubrey Moore and the Anglo-Catholic Assimilation of Science in Oxford (PhD thesis). Toronto: University of Toronto. ISBN 978-0-612-27641-3.
- ——— (2005) [2004]. "Moore, Aubrey Lackington (1848–1890)". .
- Moore, Aubrey (1893). Science and Faith (4th ed.). London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co. Retrieved 18 December 2017.
- Moore, James (1910). The Post Darwinian Controversies, 1870–1900. Cambridge University Press.
- ISBN 978-1-60608-741-1.
Further reading
- England, Richard (2001). "Natural Selection, Teleology, and the Logos". Osiris. 16: 270–287. S2CID 143782095.