One of the speakers at The Organic and the Normative conference, taking place between July 30โAugust 1, 2024 in Ljubljana, Slovenia, is going to be Christopher Donohue.
Dr. Christopher Donohue serves as the Historian for the National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI) at the National Institutes of Health. He founded the NHGRI’s institutional archives and currently oversees the History of Genomics Program, which encourages the study of genomics and its role in the 20th-century life sciences. Dr. Donohue has conducted over sixty oral history interviews encompassing various aspects of modern biology and genetics. He edited a special issue on โGenomics and the Human Genome Projectโ for the Journal of the History of Biology and is an associate editor of the Ideology and Politics Journal, which features peer-reviewed research on post-Soviet ideologies and politics. His work focuses on the history of population genetics and contemporary conceptual issues in biological science, with interests spanning from the appropriation of concepts in the biological and social sciences to the reception of scientific ideologies like Darwinism, vitalism, and materialism in central and southeastern Europe.
Abstract
Donohue, C. (2023). โA Mountain of Nonsenseโ? Czech and Slovenian Receptions of Materialism and Vitalism from c. 1860s to the First World War. In: Donohue, C., Wolfe, C.T. (eds) Vitalism and Its Legacy in Twentieth Century Life Sciences and Philosophy. History, Philosophy and Theory of the Life Sciences, vol 29. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-12604-8_5
In general, historians of science and historians of ideas do not focus on critical appraisals of scientific ideas such as vitalism and materialism from Catholic intellectuals in eastern and southeastern Europe, nor is there much comparative work available on how significant European ideas in the life sciences such as materialism and vitalism were understood and received outside of France, Germany, Italy and the UK. Insofar as such treatments are available, they focus on the contributions of nineteenth century vitalism and materialism to later twentieth ideologies, as well as trace the interactions of vitalism and various intersections with the development of genetics and evolutionary biology see Mosse (The culture of Western Europe: the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Westview Press, Boulder, 1988, Toward the final solution: a history of European racism. Howard Fertig Publisher, New York, 1978; Turda et al., Crafting humans: from genesis to eugenics and beyond. V&R Unipress, Goettingen, 2013). English and American eugenicists (such as William Caleb Saleeby), and scores of others underscored the importance of vitalism to the future science of โeugenicsโ (Saleeby, The progress of eugenics. Cassell, New York, 1914). Little has been written on materialism qua materialism or vitalism qua vitalism in eastern Europe.
The Czech and Slovene cases are interesting for comparison insofar as both had national awakenings in the middle of the nineteenth century which were linguistic and scientific, while also being religious in nature (on the Czech case see David, Realism, tolerance, and liberalism in the Czech National awakening: legacies of the Bohemian reformation. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, 2010; on the Slovene case see Kann and David, Peoples of the Eastern Habsburg Lands, 1526-1918. University of Washington Press, Washington, 2010). In the case of many Catholic writers writing in Moravia, there are not only slight noticeable differences in word-choice and construction but a greater influence of scholastic Latin, all the more so in the works of nineteenth century Czech priests and bishops.
In this case, German, Latin and literary Czech coexisted in the same texts. Thus, the presence of these three languages throws caution on the work on the work of Michael Gordin, who argues that scientific language went from Latin to German to vernacular. In Czech, Slovenian and Croatian cases, all three coexisted quite happily until the First World War, with the decades from the 1840s to the 1880s being particularly suited to linguistic flexibility, where oftentimes writers would put in parentheses a Latin or German word to make the meaning clear to the audience. Note however that these multiple paraphrases were often polemical in the case of discussions of materialism and vitalism.
In Slovenia ฤas (Time or The Times) ran from 1907 to 1942, running under the muscular editorship of Fr. Aleลก Uลกeniฤnik (1868โ1952) devoted hundreds of pages often penned by Uลกeniฤnik himself or his close collaborators to wide-ranging discussions of vitalism, materialism and its implied social and societal consequences. Like their Czech counterparts Fr. Matฤj Prochรกzka (1811โ1889) and Fr. Antonรญn Lenz (1829โ1901), materialism was often conjoined with “pantheism” and immorality. In both the Czech and the Slovene cases, materialism was viewed as a deep theological problem, as it made the Catholic account of the transformation of the Eucharistic sacrifice into the real presence untenable. In the Czech case, materialism was often conjoined with โbestialityโ (bestialnost) and radical politics, especially agrarianism, while in the case of Uลกeniฤnik and Slovene writers, materialism was conjoined with โparliamentarianismโ and โdemocracy.โ There is too an unexamined dialogue on vitalism, materialism and pan-Slavism which needs to be explored.
Writing in 1914 in a review of O bistvu ลพivljenja (Concerning the essence of life) by the controversial Croatian biologist Boris Zarnik) Uลกeniฤnik underscored that vitalism was an speculative outlook because it left the field of positive science and entered the speculative realm of philosophy. Uลกeniฤnik writes that it was โToo badโ that Zarnik โtacklesโ the question of vitalism, as his zoological opinions are interesting but his philosophy was not โsuccessfulโ. Uลกeniฤnik concluded that vitalism was a rather old idea, which belonged more to the realm of philosophy and Thomistic theology then biology. It nonetheless seemed to provide a solution for the particular characteristics of life, especially its individuality. It was certainly preferable to all the dangers that materialism presented. Likewise in the Czech case, Emmanuel Radl (1873โ1942) spent much of his life extolling the virtues of vitalism, up until his death in home confinement during the Nazi Protectorate. Vitalism too became bound up in the late nineteenth century rediscovery of early modern philosophy, which became an essential part of the development of new scientific consciousness and linguistic awareness right before the First World War in the Czech lands. Thus, by comparing the reception of these ideas together in two countries separated by โnationalityโ but bounded by religion and active engagement with French and German ideas (especially Driesch), we can reconstruct not only receptions of vitalism and materialism, but articulate their political and theological valances.