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German academic science and the mandarin ethos, 1850–1880

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 January 2009

Robert Paul
Affiliation:
Department of Mathematical Sciences, Dickinson College, Carlisle, Pennsylvania 17013, U.S.A.

Extract

During the nineteenth century an intellectual elite formed in Germany which owed its status primarily to educational qualifications rather than to hereditary rights or wealth. With the ascendency of this elite, which Fritz Ringer has called the German ‘mandarins’, came their acceptance as the spiritual bearers of culture in German life. Politically they controlled the life of the Reichstag and hence were the spokesmen of the nation. As an intellectual elite they fed a diet of German idealistic philosophy to the educational class. The university professors, as the most influential members of this class, spoke for the mandarin elite as a whole; and most cultivated Germans looked to the academicians for their understanding of political and cultural issues. Hence, German academic opinion became a sort of ‘mandarin ideology’.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © British Society for the History of Science 1984

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References

Appreciation is expressed to Douglas D. Alder, David M. Knight, and Jane Maienschein for having read various drafts of this essay, and to Dickinson College for a faculty grant that enabled me to complete my research.

1 For an exposition of the mandarin thesis, see Ringer, Fritz K., The Decline of the German Mandarins: The German Academic Community, 1890–1933, Cambridge, Mass., 1969Google Scholar. Russell McCormmach has considered the relationship of the natural scientists in Germany to the mandarin ideology in the period after 1890. See his ‘On Academic Scientists in Wilhelmian Germany’, in Science and Its Public: The Changing Relationship (ed. Holton, Gerald and Blanpied, W. A.), Boston, 1976, pp. 157171.Google Scholar

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