Life and Letters of Thomas Henry Huxley — Volume 2

audiobook

Life and Letters of Thomas Henry Huxley — Volume 2

by Thomas Henry Huxley

EN·~12 hours·20 chapters

Chapters

20 total
1

Produced by Sue Asscher asschers@bigpond.com

18:55
2

T.H.H.

1:03:43
3

CHAPTER 2.2.

23:14
4

CHAPTER 2.3.

53:38
5

CHAPTER 2.4.

41:46
6

CHAPTER 2.5.

52:41
7

CHAPTER 2.6.

36:34
8

CHAPTER 2.7.

29:13
9

CHAPTER 2.8.

37:51
10

CHAPTER 2.9.

27:39

Description

The second volume of this three‑part collection opens in 1870, a pivotal year for a scientist who had spent the previous decade fighting to establish his reputation. After years of hard struggle and a modest professorship, he finds his scattered studies suddenly ordered by the impact of Darwin’s Origin of Species, propelling him onto the public stage as a fierce defender of evolution. His courage in the Oxford debate and his willingness to confront entrenched ideas mark him as both a champion of new science and a controversial figure in Victorian society.

Beyond the courtroom of ideas, he turns his energy toward reshaping education, insisting that scientific training become a cornerstone of the school system. His Lay Sermons gather his moral and intellectual philosophy, earning praise even from skeptical reviewers who recognize his clear thinking. While royal commissions and society presidencies increasingly fill his days, the volume captures the tension between his administrative duties and the relentless curiosity that still drives his own research, offering listeners a vivid portrait of a man at the crossroads of science, public life, and personal conviction.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~12 hours (742K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2004-03-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Thomas Henry Huxley

Thomas Henry Huxley

1825–1895

A fierce defender of science in Victorian Britain, this biologist and essayist helped bring Charles Darwin’s ideas into public debate and gave the English language the word “agnostic.” His writing is sharp, lively, and still surprisingly readable.

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