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Albert Eagle

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Albert Eagle was an English mathematician and philosopher who wrote several books (some of them privately published) giving his forcefully expressed and somewhat eccentric views on science and mathematics.

Biography

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He was an assistant to J. J. Thomson, and was later a lecturer at the Victoria University of Manchester. His best-known book is on elliptic functions,[1] where he uses his idiosyncratic mathematical notation, such as τ instead of π/2,[2] and !n for n factorial. In his other writings he dismissed special relativity, quantum mechanics and natural selection as absurdities.[3]

Eagle's book The Philosophy of Religion versus The Philosophy of Science criticizes the theory of relativity and the philosophy of materialism.[4][5] Eagle was influenced by Henri Bergson and believed that spiritual forces guide evolution (spiritual evolution).[3] Eagle has been described as a pantheist as he held the view that God is the ultimate substance and the world is but a pattern on his surface.[5]

Eagle proposed that man is composed of four substances: the physical body, the non-physical body, the mind of which ideas and memories are gathered and the inner-ego or personality.[5] Eagle believed that the inner-ego, mind and non-physical body survive death into another world.[5]

Publications

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References

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  1. ^ Eagle (1958)
  2. ^ Eagle (1958), p. ix
  3. ^ a b Bowler (2001), p.142
  4. ^ E. W. M. (1937). "The Philosophy of Religion versus The Philosophy of Science" (PDF). Nature. 139: 463.
  5. ^ a b c d A. L. (1939). "Reviewed Work: The Philosophy of Religion Versus the Philosophy of Science by Albert Eagle". Studies: An Irish Quarterly Review. 28 (112): 706–707.

Bibliography

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