University of Nebraska–Lincoln and William Paley: Difference between pages

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{{about|the philosopher|the broadcaster|William S. Paley}}
{{redirect|University of Nebraska|other University of Nebraska campuses|University of Nebraska system}}
{{Infobox Scientist
{{Infobox_University
|name = William Paley
|name = [[Image:USA ne UNLlogo.png|150px|University of Nebraska-Lincoln logo]]
|box_width = 300px
|image = [[Image:Unlofficialseal.gif|148px|Seal of the University of Nebraska]]
|image = WilliamPaley.jpg
|motto = ''Literis Dedicata et Omnibus Artibus'' ([[Latin]]: Dedicated to Letters and All the Arts)
|image_width = 300px
|tagline = There is no place like Nebraska.
|caption = William Paley (1743-1805)
|established = 1869
|birth_date = July 1743
|type = [[Public university|Public]] [[Morrill Land-Grant Colleges Act|Land Grant]] [[University]]
|birth_place = [[Peterborough]], [[England]]
|calendar = Semester
|death_date = [[25 May]] [[1805]]
|endowment= [[United States dollar|US $]]1.15 [[1000000000 (number)|billion]] (systemwide) <ref name="NACUBO">"[http://www.nacubo.org/documents/research/2006NES_Listing.pdf 2006 NACUBO Endowment Study]". ''National Association of College and University Business Officers''.</ref>
|death_place = [[Bishopwearmouth]], [[England]]
|chancellor = [[Harvey Perlman]]
|residence = [[England]]
|city = [[Lincoln, Nebraska|Lincoln]]
|citizenship =
|state = [[Nebraska]]
|nationality = [[England|English]]
|country = [[United States|USA]]
|ethnicity =
|students = 22,973
|field = [[Theology]], [[philosophy]], [[natural history]]
|undergrad = 17,371
|work_institutions = [[Otley Prince Henry's Grammar School]], [[Christ's College, Cambridge|Christ's College]] ([[Cambridge University]]), Giggleswick Parish, [[Carlisle Cathedral]], [[Lincoln Cathedral]], [[Durham Cathedral]]
|postgrad = 4,655
|alma_mater = [[Christ's College, Cambridge]]
|faculty = 1,452
|doctoral_advisor = [[Anthony Shepherd]]</br>[[William Backhouse]]
|campus = [[urban area|Urban]]<br />613 acres (2.5 km²) main campuses<br />42,562 acres (172.2 km²) total throughout state
|doctoral_students =
|nickname = [[Image:University-of-Nebraska-Lincoln-logo.png|50px]] [[Nebraska Cornhuskers|Cornhuskers]]
|known_for = Contributions to [[political philosophy]], [[ethics]] and [[philosophy of religion]]
|mascot = [[Herbie Husker]] and [[Lil' Red]]
|author_abbrev_bot =
|colors = [[Scarlet (color)|Scarlet]] and [[Cream (color)|Cream]] {{color box|#FF2400}}{{color box|#FFFDD0}}
|author_abbrev_zoo =
|affiliations = [[Big 12 Conference|Big 12]], [[Association of American Universities|AAU]]
|influences =
|website = [http://www.unl.edu/ www.unl.edu]
|influenced =
|footnotes = Logo is a trademark of the University of Nebraska.
|prizes =
|telephone = 402-472-7211
|religion = [[Anglican]]
|footnotes =
|signature =
}}
}}
'''William Paley''' (July 1743 &ndash; [[25 May]] [[1805]]) was a [[United Kingdom|British]] [[Christian apologetics|Christian apologist]], [[philosopher]], and [[utilitarianism|utilitarian]]. He is famous for the ''[[watchmaker analogy]]'' commonly known as the ''[[Teleological argument]]''.
The '''University of Nebraska–Lincoln''', often called '''UNL''', but also known as '''Nebraska''' or '''NU''', is the [[flagship]] institution of the [[University of Nebraska system]]. UNL was founded in 1869 as a [[land-grant university]] under the provisions of the [[Morrill Act]]. Its main campus is located in [[Lincoln, Nebraska|Lincoln]] a few blocks north of the [[Nebraska State Capitol]]. Nebraska is an international leader in scholarly research, having been a member of the [[Association of American Universities]] since 1909. It is listed as a Carnegie Research I/ Carnegie Research-Extensive institution.


Born in [[Peterborough]], [[England]], Paley was educated at [[Prince Henry's Grammar School]], of which his father was [[head teacher|headmaster]], and at [[Christ's College, Cambridge]]. He graduated in 1763 as [[senior wrangler]], became fellow in 1766, and in 1768 tutor of his college. He lectured on [[Samuel Clarke|Clarke]], [[Joseph Butler|Butler]] and [[John Locke|Locke]], and also delivered a systematic course on [[moral philosophy]], which subsequently formed the basis of his well-known treatise. The subscription controversy was then agitating the university, and Paley published an anonymous defence of a pamphlet in which [[William Law|Bishop Law]] had advocated the retrenchment and simplification of the [[Thirty-nine Articles]]; he did not, however, sign the petition (called the "Feathers" petition from being drawn up at a meeting at the Feathers tavern) for a relaxation of the terms of subscription.
Nebraska was the first institution in the [[Western United States|American West]] to grant a Ph.D. degree and was the first to establish an undergraduate psychology lab. The discipline of [[ecology]] was born at the university. Its scholarly press, the [[University of Nebraska Press]], is the second-largest state university press in the United States, and one of the largest university presses in the world. Its campus art gallery, the [[Sheldon Museum of Art]], has the world's foremost collection of 20th century North American art.


In 1776 Paley was presented to the rectory of [[Musgrave, Cumbria|Musgrave]] in [[Westmorland]], supplemented at the end of the year by the vicarage of [[Dalston]], and presently exchanged for that of Appleby. He was also a Justice of the Peace. In 1782 he became the [[Archdeacon of Carlisle]]. At the suggestion of his friend John Law (son of [[Edmund Law]], [[Bishop of Carlisle]] and formerly his colleague at Cambridge), Paley published (1785) his lectures, revised and enlarged, under the title of ''The Principles of Moral and Political Philosophy''. The book at once became the ethical text-book of the University of Cambridge, and passed through fifteen editions in the author's lifetime. He strenuously supported the abolition of the [[Slavery|slave trade]], and in 1789 wrote a paper on the subject. The ''Principles'' was followed in 1790 by his first essay in the field of Christian apologetics, ''Horae Paulinae, or the Truth of the Scripture History of St Paul'' evinced by a Comparison of the Epistles which bear his Name with the Acts of the Apostles and with one another, probably the most original of its author's works. It was followed in 1794 by the celebrated ''View of the Evidences of Christianity''.
==Academics==
===Academic divisions===
The university offers more than 140 undergraduate majors and 275 programs of study through 10 colleges:
*[[College of Agricultural Sciences and Natural Resources (University of Nebraska–Lincoln)|College of Agricultural Sciences and Natural Resources]]
*[[College of Architecture (University of Nebraska–Lincoln)|College of Architecture]]
*[[College of Arts and Sciences (University of Nebraska–Lincoln)|College of Arts and Sciences]]
*[[College of Business Administration (University of Nebraska–Lincoln)|College of Business Administration]]
*[[College of Education and Human Sciences (University of Nebraska–Lincoln)|College of Education and Human Sciences]]
*[[College of Engineering (University of Nebraska–Lincoln)|College of Engineering]]
*[[Hixson-Lied College of Fine and Performing Arts]]
*[[Graduate Studies (University of Nebraska–Lincoln)|Graduate Studies]]
*[[College of Journalism and Mass Communications (University of Nebraska–Lincoln)|College of Journalism and Mass Communications]]
*[[College of Law (University of Nebraska–Lincoln)|College of Law]]


Paley's [[latitudinarian]] views are said to have debarred him from the highest positions in the Church. But for his services in defence of the faith the [[Bishop of London]] gave him a stall in [[St Paul's Cathedral|St Paul's]]; the [[Bishop of Lincoln]] made him subdean of that cathedral, and the [[Bishop of Carlisle]] conferred upon him the rectory of [[Bishopwearmouth]]. During the remainder of his life his time was divided between Bishopwearmouth and Lincoln. He died on [[25 May]] [[1805]].
UNL also offers programs at its campus from other University of Nebraska institutions, including the [[University of Nebraska at Omaha]] College of Public Affairs and Community Service, the [[University of Nebraska Medical Center]] colleges of Dentistry and Nursing, and the [[Peter Kiewit Institute]] managed in partnership with the University of Nebraska at Omaha.


==Campus==
==Thought==
Paley's ''Principles of Moral and Political Philosophy'' was one of the most influential philosophical texts in late Enlightenment Britain. It was cited in several Parliamentary debates over the corn laws and it remained a set textbook at Cambridge well into the Victorian era. Indeed, even Darwin was required to read it when he studied at Christ's College. The ''Evidences of Christianity'' was a critical essay of sorts that drew from [[John Douglas (bishop)|Bishop Douglas]]'s ''Criterion'' and [[Nathanial Lardner|Lardner]]'s ''Credibility of the Gospel History''. Like many thinkers of his day, his idea of revelation advocated the divine origin of Christianity by isolating it from the general history of mankind, whereas later writers find their chief argument in the continuity of the process of revelation.
[[Image:University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Hamilton Hall.jpg|thumb|right|Hamilton Hall]]
In 1869, the original University of Nebraska campus was laid out on four city blocks and comprised one building called University Hall. Currently, the university has two campuses, totaling {{convert|613|acre|km2}}: City Campus, which is just north of downtown Lincoln, and south of the [[Nebraska State Fair]] grounds, and East Campus, which is approximately two miles northeast of City Campus.


Paley is also remembered for his contributions to the [[philosophy of religion]], utilitarian [[ethics]] and Christian [[apologetics]]. In 1802 he published ''Natural Theology; or, Evidences of the Existence and Attributes of the Deity'', his last book. As he states in the preface, he saw the book as a preamble to his other philosophical and theological books; in fact, he suggests that ''Natural Theology'' should be first and so that his readers could then peruse his other books according to their tastes. His main goal was to suggest that the world was designed and sustained by God. Such a book fell within the long tradition of natural theological works written during the Enlightenment; and this explains why Paley based much of his thought on [[John Ray|Ray]] (1691) and [[William Derham|Derham]] (1711) and [[Bernard Nieuwentyt|Nieuwentyt]] (1730).
===Unions===
Nebraska City Union is the student union located on the southern part of City Campus. Many services are offered to the students including dining, computer labs, and other recreational activities, while the lower level of the union houses the University Bookstore. The City Union also provides space for student organizations as well as holding offices for the Daily Nebraskan and the student government. The Rotunda Gallery showcases various student artwork. In spring 2006, the student body voted to finance an expansion to the City Union including adding new space for the university Culture Center (formerly in a different building).<ref>{{cite web|url=http://newsroom.unl.edu/releases/2006/09/07/Perlman+announces+union+expansion%2C+international+study+progr|title=Perlman announces union expansion, international study program|date=2006-09-07|publisher=University of Nebraska–Lincoln|accessdate=2008-09-22}}</ref>


Although Paley devotes a chapter of ''Natural Theology'' to astronomy, the bulk of his examples were taken from medicine and natural history. "For my part," he says, "I take my stand in human anatomy"; elsewhere he insists upon "the necessity, in each particular case, of an intelligent designing mind for the contriving and determining of the forms which organized bodies bear." In making his argument, Paley employed a wide variety of metaphors and analogies. Perhaps the most famous is his analogy between a watch and the world. Historians, philosophers and theologians often call this the [[Watchmaker analogy]] and many a student has cited it in an exam. The germ of the idea is to be found in ancient writers who used sundials and ptolemiac epicycles to illustrate the divine order of the world. These types of examples can be seen in the work of the ancient philosopher [[Cicero]], especially in his ''De natura deorum'', ii. 87 and 97 (see Hallam, ''Literature of Europe'', ii. 385, note.). During the Enlightenment, the watch analogy occurred in the writings of [[Robert Boyle]] and [[Joseph Priestley]]. Thus, Paley's use of the watch (and other mechanical objects like it) continued a long and fruitful tradition of analogical reasoning that was well received by those who read ''Natural Theology'' when it was published in 1802.
Nebraska East Union is located on East Campus and offers similar student services as the City Union. The Loft Gallery provides space for community and student artwork.


==Relevance==
===University libraries===
Since Paley is often read in university courses that address the philosophy of religion, the timing of his design argument has sometimes perplexed modern philosophers. Earlier in the century [[David Hume]] had argued against notions of design with counter examples drawn from monstrosity, imperfect forms of testimony and probability. Although these examples may ring true with many twenty-first century readers, they did not appeal to most of Paley's eighteenth-century contemporaries. Notions of evidence and probability were different then and it took time for Hume's arguments to be accepted by the reading public; in fact his philosophical works sold poorly until agnostics like [[T H Huxley]] championed Hume's philosophy in the nineteenth century. By then Paley was long dead.
<!-- This section is linked from [[Don L. Love Memorial Library]] -->
The University Libraries are the only set of comprehensive research libraries in Nebraska. Three [[million]] volumes reside in UNL's two main libraries. The Don L. Love Memorial Library is the main library on campus and houses collections on [[social sciences]] and [[humanities]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.unl.edu/libr/about/|title= About UNL Libraries|publisher=University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries|accessdate=2008-09-22}}</ref> Other academic disciplines are housed in six branch locations on campus:
*Architecture Library
*C.Y. Thompson Library
*Engineering Library
*Geology Library
*Mathematics Library
*Music Library
The Marvin and Virginia Schmid Law Library serves the UNL College of Law.


The face of the world has changed so greatly since Paley's day that we are apt to do less than justice to his undoubted merits. Using his own examples and those of others, he arranged his arguments, it has been said, with a general's eye. His style is lucid and his arguments appealed so much to the reading public that his book was a best seller for most of the nineteenth century. It appealed to the Victorian [[Evangelicalism]] and to the [[Oxford Movement]] alike - but for different reasons. Paley's views also influenced (both positively and negatively) theologians, philosophers and scientists. In addition to ''Political Philosophy'' [[Charles Darwin]] also read ''Natural Theology'' during his student years and later stated in his autobiography that he was initially convinced by the argument. His views, of course, changed with time. By the 1820s and 1830s, well-known liberals like [[Thomas Wakley]] and other radical editors of [[The Lancet]] were using Paley's aging examples to attack the establishment's control over medical and scientific education in Durham, London, Oxford and Cambridge. It also inspired the [[Earl of Bridgewater]] to commission the ''Bridgewater Treatises'' and the [[Society for the Promotion of Christian Knowledge]] to issue cheap reprints for the rising middle class.
===Museums===
The [[University of Nebraska State Museum]] is located on campus in Morrill Hall. The museum holds several collections and exhibits particularly featuring [[natural history]] and famously houses [[mastadon]] bone [[fossils]]. Because of these fossils, and a large bronze mastadon statue located in front of the building, it is popularly known as "Elephant Hall."


Today Paley's name evokes both reverence and repulsion and his work is cited accordingly by authors seeking to frame the history of human thought. In this context, it should perhaps be remembered that Paley was a product of his time and that his ''Natural Theology'', for better or for not, stands as a notable entry in the canon of Western thought.
The [[Sheldon Memorial Art Gallery]] and Sculpture Garden is home to more than 12,000 works of art in all media and is a comprehensive collection of [[American art]] with prominent holdings in 19th century landscape and [[still life]], [[American Impressionism]], early [[Modernism]], geometric abstraction, [[Abstract Expressionism]], [[pop art|pop]], [[minimalism]], and [[contemporary art]]. The museum has the largest collection of 20th Century North American art in the world; it includes works by such well known artists as [[Edward Hopper]], [[Andy Warhol]], [[Jackson Pollock]], [[Mary Cassatt]], [[Wayne Thiebaud]] and [[Georgia O'Keeffe]].


==Further reading==
The Great Plains Art Museum is home to the Christlieb Collection<ref name="UNL GPA Museum">
* Brown, Colin, ''Miracles and the Critical Mind'', Paternoster, Exeter UK/William B. Eerdmans, Grand Rapids, 1984.
{{cite web |url= http://www.unl.edu/plains/gallery/gallery.html |title= Great Plains Art Museum |work= unl.edu |quote= The Great Plains Art Museum opened in 1981 after a generous donation from Dr. John and Elizabeth Christlieb of Bellevue, Nebraska. The Christlieb Collection… consists of approximately 170 bronze sculptures, 140 paintings and drawings, 100 other works on paper and several hundred photographs, and includes artwork by [[Albert Bierstadt]], [[William de la Montagne Cary]], [[Robert F. Gilder]], [[William Henry Jackson]], [[Frederic Remington]], [[Charles M. Russell]] and [[Olaf Wieghorst]]. The library donated by the Christliebs is an impressive 4,000 volumes, which consists of several Western novels and many other fiction and nonfiction books about the West and the Great Plains. }}</ref> which features American western art and Americana.
* Brooke, John H. ''Science and Religion: Some Historical Perspectives'', Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1991.
* Clarke, M.L., ''Paley: Evidences for the Man'', University of Toronto Press, Toronto, 1974.
* Dodds, G. L. Paley, ''Wearside and Natural Theology'', Sunderland, 2003.
* Eddy, Matthew D., ‘The Science and Rhetoric of Paley’s Natural Theology’, Literature and Theology, 18 (2004), 1-22.
* Fyfe, A. ‘Publishing and the classics: Paley’s Natural Theology and the nineteenth-century scientific canon’, ''Studies in the History and Philosophy of Science'', 33 (2002), 433-55.
* Gascoigne, J., ‘Rise and Fall of British Newtonian Natural Theology’, ''Science in Context'', 2 (1988), 219-256.
* Gillespie, N. C. ‘Divine Design and the Industrial Revolution. William Paley’s Abortive Reform of Natural Theology’, Isis, 81 (1990), 214-229.
* Gilson, E., ''From Aristotle to Darwin and Back again: A Journey in Final Causality, Species, and Evolution'', John Lyon (trans), Notre Dame Universiy Press, London 1984.
* Knight, David. ''Science and Spirituality: The Volitile Connection'', Routledge, London, 2004.
* LeMahieu, D.L. ''The Mind of William Paley'', Lincoln, Nebraska, 1976.
* [[Henry Robert McAdoo|McAdoo, H. R.]], ''The Spirit of Anglicanism: A Survey of Anglican Theological Method in the Seventeenth Century'' (London, 1965).
* [[Alister McGrath|McGrath]], A. E., ''A Scientific Theology: Volume I, Nature'', Continuum, Edinburgh, 2001.
* Meadley, G. W. ''Memoirs of William Paley, to which is Added an Appendix'', London, 1809.
* Ospovat, D. ''The Development of Darwin’s Theory: Natural History, Natural Theology and Natural Selection, 1838-1859'', Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1995.
* Paley, E. ''An Account of the Life and Writings of William Paley'', [1825], Farnborough: Gregg, 1970; originally, this was the first volume of ''The Works of William Paley'', London, 1825.
* Paley, William, ''Natural Theology'', with an introduction and notes by Matthew D. Eddy and David M. Knight, Oxford University Press, 2006.
* Pelikan, J. ''Christianity and Classical Culture: The Metamorphosis of Natural Theology in the Christian Encounter with Hellenism'', Yale University Press, New Haven, 1993.
* Philipp, W. ‘Physicotheology in the Age of Enlightenment: Appearance and History’, ''Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century'', 57 (1967), 1233-1267.
* Porter, R. ‘Creation and Credence’, in Barry Barnes and Steven Shapin (eds), ''Natural Order: Historical Studies of Scientific Culture'', Sage Press, Beverly Hills, 1979.
* Raven, C. ''Natural Religion and Christian Theology'', Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1953.
* Richards, R. J. ''The Romantic Conception of Life: Science and Philosophy in the Age of Goethe'', Chicago University Press, Chicago, 2002.
* Rose, J. ''The Intellectual Life of the British Working Classes'', Yale University Press, New Haven, 2002.
* Rosen, Frederick, ''Classical Utilitarianism from Hume to Mill'' ([[Routledge]] Studies in Ethics & Moral Theory), 2003. ISBN 0415220947
* Rousseau, G. S. and Roy Porter (eds), ''The Ferment of Knowledge – Studies in the Historiography of Eighteenth Century Science'', Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1980.
* St Clair, W. ''The Reading Nation in the Romantic Period'', Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2004.
* Topham, J. R. ‘Science, natural theology, and evangelicalism in the early nineteenth century: [[Thomas Chalmers]] and the evidence controversy’, in D. N. Livingstone, D. G. Hart and M. A. Knoll, ''Evangelicals and Science in Historical Perspective'' (Oxford: 1999), 142-174.
* Topham, J. R. ‘Beyond the “Common Context”: the Production and Reading of the Bridgewater Treatises’, ''Isis'', 89 (1998), 233-62.
* Viner, J. ''The Role of Providence in the Social Order'', American Philosophical Society, Philadelphia, 1972.
* Von Sydow, M. ‘Charles Darwin: A Christian undermining Christianity?’, in David M. Knight and Matthew D. Eddy, ''Science and Beliefs: From Natural Philosophy to Natural Science'', Ashgate, Aldershot, 2005!!


==External links==
The [[Lester_F._Larsen_Tractor_Museum|Lester F. Larsen Tractor Museum]] is located on the university's East Campus. It houses 40 historical tractors, an antique auto and various types of farm tools. In addition it documents Nebraska's tractor testing law examinations that to this day requires testing of all tractors to be sold in Nebraska, ensuring performance is as advertised.
*{{gutenberg author|id=William_Paley|name=William Paley}}

*http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/history/paley.html
===Performing arts venues===
*http://www.utm.edu/research/iep/p/paley.htm
*The [[Lied Center for Performing Arts]] is a [[performing arts]] venue used primarily for orchestra concerts and theatre performances. The [[Mary Riepma Ross Media Arts Center]] is a two screen theater located on the UNL City Campus. It features primarily [[arthouse]] and [[independent films]], and [[documentaries]]. The Howell Theatre, Studio Theatre, and Lab Theatre are home to the performances of the Johnny Carson School of Theatre and Film.
*{{Citation

| last = Paley
===Other points of interest===
| first = William
*Architecture Hall, formerly the universities' library and now home of the universities' outstanding architecture program, is a proud landmark standing on the west edge of campus. It is also the oldest building on campus. This historic structure is linked to the old law building via a huge glass connecting space, known, understandably, as "The Link."
| author-link =

| year = 1809
*The [[University of Nebraska Press]] is the second-largest public university press in the United States, and is among the largest publishers of scholarly titles in the world.<ref>http://www.nufoundation.org/Shop//showDivision.sp?cat=87</ref> It has a program for publishing original works and reprints of significant works about the West. The "Bison Books" imprint is a series of high quality trade paperback editions of significant titles.
| title =Natural Theology: or, Evidences of the Existence and Attributes of the Deity

| edition =12th
* UNL is home of the Pershing Rifles National Headquarters. This is in recognition of General [[John J. Pershing]] (an 1893 NU law school graduate and former professor of Military Science and Tactics) who created "Company A," a competitive drill team, for the University of Nebraska's Cadet Corps in 1891. The drill team won the National Competitive Drills in 1892, changed its name to the "Varsity Rifles" when it became a recognized fraternal organization in 1893, and finally changed its name again to the "Pershing Rifles" in 1894. UNL rededicated the Military and Naval Science Building as the John J. Pershing Military and Naval Science Building on April 20, 2006.
| publication-place = London

| publisher =Printed for J. Faulder
*The [[International Quilt Study Center]] is on East Campus and will be [[Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design|LEED]] certified.
| url =http://darwin-online.org.uk/content/frameset?itemID=A142&viewtype=text&pageseq=1

| accessdate =
*The Maxwell Arboretum located on East Campus is part of the [[Nebraska Statewide Arboretum]].

== Sustainability ==
The University of Nebraska has adopted LEED certification for all new construction projects. UNL's Sustainable Food Project, started in 2005, is designed to serve meals on campus that feature local and sustainably produced foods. The university's motor pool includes vehicles fueled by soy biodiesel as well as gasohol (85% ethanol, 15% gasoline blend). The University of Nebraska received a grade of D+ on the College Sustainability Report Card 2008.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.endowmentinstitute.org/sustainability/CollegeSustainabilityReportCard2008.pdf|title=College Sustainability Report Card 2008|publisher=Sustainable Endowments Institute|pages=9|accessdate=2008-09-22}}</ref>

==Athletics==
[[Image:USA ne lincoln memorialstadium.jpg|thumb|right|[[Memorial Stadium, Lincoln|Memorial Stadium]]]]
[[Image:091407-USCNeb-HerbieHusker.jpg|thumb|right|University of Nebraska–Lincoln mascot [[Herbie Husker]]]]
[[Image:Nulilred.jpg|thumb|right|University of Nebraska mascot [[Lil' Red]]]]
{{main|Nebraska Cornhuskers}}
The school's sports teams are named the Nebraska [[Cornhuskers]] (or simply the Huskers). They compete in [[NCAA]] [[Division I]] (I-A for football) as members of the northern division of the [[Big 12 Conference]]. The Huskers have 21 [[varsity team]]s that compete in 14 different sports and claim all or part of 23 National Championships across 5 sports, most notably Volleyball, Football, and Gymnastics. In football, the Huskers have had 3 [[Heisman Trophy]] winners: [[Johnny Rodgers]], [[Mike Rozier]], and [[Eric Crouch]].

==Song==
Notable among a number of songs commonly played and sung at various events such as [[commencement]] and [[convocation]], and athletic games are "Dear Old Nebraska U." and the University of Nebraska–Lincoln fight song.

==Student life==
About 78 percent of UNL students are from Nebraska, while the rest are from all forty-nine other states and 114 foreign countries. On-campus students are also members of the UNL [[Residence Hall Association]], which serves as the governing body for the residence halls. Select senior honoraries include the Nebraska-only [[Society of Innocents]] and the Black Masque chapter of [[Mortar Board]].

===Residence Halls===
Approximately 40% of the student body lives on-campus in 14 traditional [[residence hall]]s, and two on-campus apartment-style halls.

There are 11 traditional residence halls on the City Campus:
{{Columns-list|2|
*Abel
*Cather
*Harper
*Husker Hall
*Kauffman Center
*Pound
*Neihardt
*Sandoz
*Schramm
*Selleck
*Smith
}}
}}
*http://williampaley.com
* Except from William Paley's 1802 book Natural Theology [http://hss.fullerton.edu/philosophy/hof2.htm]


{{DEFAULTSORT:Paley, William}}
Three traditional residence halls are on the East Campus:
[[Category:1743 births]]
*Burr
[[Category:1805 deaths]]
*Fedde
[[Category:British philosophers]]
*Love Memorial Co-op
[[Category:Christian apologetics]]

[[Category:Old Giggleswickians]]
And two on-campus apartment-style halls are located on the City Campus:
[[Category:English Anglican priests]]
*Husker Courtyards
[[Category:English philosophers]]
*Husker Village
[[Category:English political philosophers]]

[[Category:Political theorists]]
===Student government===
[[Category:Senior wranglers]]
The governing body for UNL students is the of Students of the University of Nebraska (ASUN). Every year students vote for a president, two vice presidents, and a senate that is composed of representatives from each college. The president also acts as the student regent to the NU Board of Regents.
[[Category:Alumni of Christ's College, Cambridge]]

[[Category:Fellows of Christ's College, Cambridge]]
===Student organizations===
[[Category:Utilitarians]]
UNL has 400 student organizations on campus that represent a variety of interests.{{Fact|date=April 2008}} Organizations are supported by Student Involvement.
[[Category:People from Northamptonshire]]

===Greek houses===
UNL has a significant [[Fraternities and sororities|Greek population]], with about 5,200 students being members of 30 fraternities (28 chapters and two colonies) and 14 sororities. There are numerous events on campus throughout the year such as decorating "Greek Row" for the homecoming parade and various philanthropy events.

{| class="wikitable"
!colspan=1|Sororities
!colspan=2|Fraternities
|-
|valign="top" style="font-size:smaller;"|
* [[Alpha Chi Omega]]
* [[Alpha Delta Pi]]
* [[Alpha Omicron Pi]]
* [[Alpha Phi]]
* [[Alpha Xi Delta]]
* [[Chi Omega]]
* [[Delta Delta Delta]]
* [[Delta Gamma]]
* [[Gamma Phi Beta]]
* [[Kappa Alpha Theta]]
* [[Kappa Delta]]
* [[Kappa Kappa Gamma]]
* [[Phi Mu]]
* [[Pi Beta Phi]]
|valign="top" style="font-size:smaller;"|
* [[Acacia]]
* [[Alpha Gamma Nu]]
* [[Alpha Gamma Rho]]
* [[Alpha Gamma Sigma]]
* [[Alpha Phi Alpha]]
* [[Alpha Tau Omega]]
* [[Beta Sigma Psi]]
* [[Beta Theta Pi]]
* [[Chi Phi]]
* [[Delta Tau Delta]]
* [[Delta Upsilon]]
* [[FarmHouse]]
* [[Iota Phi Theta]]
* [[Kappa Alpha Psi]]
* [[Lambda Chi Alpha]]
|valign="top" style="font-size:smaller;"|
* [[Omega Psi Phi]]
* [[Phi Delta Theta]]
* [[Phi Gamma Delta]]
* [[Phi Kappa Theta]]
* [[Phi Kappa Psi]]
* [[Pi Kappa Alpha]]
* [[Pi Tau Sigma]]
* [[Sigma Alpha Epsilon]]
* [[Sigma Lambda Beta]]
* [[Sigma Chi]]
* [[Sigma Phi Epsilon]]
* [[Sigma Nu]]
* [[Tau Kappa Epsilon]]
* [[Triangle Fraternity|Triangle]]
* [[Theta Chi]]
* [[Theta Xi]]
|}

===Media===
The ''[[Daily Nebraskan]]'', known to students as the "DN", is UNL's student newspaper. It was established in 1901 and is published every weekday during the fall and spring semesters and weekly during the summer.

UNL operates a [[list of broadcast station classes|Class A]] [[FM broadcasting|FM]] [[radio station]], [[KRNU]], which broadcasts on 90.3 FM and has a range of approximately {{convert|20|mi|km}}. The station plays mostly [[alternative music|alternative]] and [[modern rock]] as well as running sportscasts of Nebraska's home events, news, live public affairs broadcasts of campus speakers and forums.

In February 2008, The Publications Board recognized the ''[[Dailyer Nebraskan]]'' as an affiliated publication. The board also approved the printing costs of the first three issues of the satirical paper. <ref>[http://media.www.dailynebraskan.com/media/storage/paper857/news/2007/12/12/News/Dailyer.Nebraskan.Receives.Approval-3143119.shtml Dailyer Nebraskan receives approval - News<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

==Notable alumni==
{{Main article|List of University of Nebraska–Lincoln people}}

== References ==
{{reflist}}

== External links ==
* [http://www.unl.edu/ University of Nebraska-Lincoln]
* [http://www.huskers.com/ University of Nebraska-Lincoln Athletic Department]
* [http://www.unl.edu/asun/ Association of Students of the University of Nebraska]
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Revision as of 07:52, 11 October 2008

William Paley
William Paley (1743-1805)
BornJuly 1743
Died25 May 1805
NationalityEnglish
Alma materChrist's College, Cambridge
Known forContributions to political philosophy, ethics and philosophy of religion
Scientific career
FieldsTheology, philosophy, natural history
InstitutionsOtley Prince Henry's Grammar School, Christ's College (Cambridge University), Giggleswick Parish, Carlisle Cathedral, Lincoln Cathedral, Durham Cathedral
Doctoral advisorAnthony Shepherd
William Backhouse

William Paley (July 1743 – 25 May 1805) was a British Christian apologist, philosopher, and utilitarian. He is famous for the watchmaker analogy commonly known as the Teleological argument.

Born in Peterborough, England, Paley was educated at Prince Henry's Grammar School, of which his father was headmaster, and at Christ's College, Cambridge. He graduated in 1763 as senior wrangler, became fellow in 1766, and in 1768 tutor of his college. He lectured on Clarke, Butler and Locke, and also delivered a systematic course on moral philosophy, which subsequently formed the basis of his well-known treatise. The subscription controversy was then agitating the university, and Paley published an anonymous defence of a pamphlet in which Bishop Law had advocated the retrenchment and simplification of the Thirty-nine Articles; he did not, however, sign the petition (called the "Feathers" petition from being drawn up at a meeting at the Feathers tavern) for a relaxation of the terms of subscription.

In 1776 Paley was presented to the rectory of Musgrave in Westmorland, supplemented at the end of the year by the vicarage of Dalston, and presently exchanged for that of Appleby. He was also a Justice of the Peace. In 1782 he became the Archdeacon of Carlisle. At the suggestion of his friend John Law (son of Edmund Law, Bishop of Carlisle and formerly his colleague at Cambridge), Paley published (1785) his lectures, revised and enlarged, under the title of The Principles of Moral and Political Philosophy. The book at once became the ethical text-book of the University of Cambridge, and passed through fifteen editions in the author's lifetime. He strenuously supported the abolition of the slave trade, and in 1789 wrote a paper on the subject. The Principles was followed in 1790 by his first essay in the field of Christian apologetics, Horae Paulinae, or the Truth of the Scripture History of St Paul evinced by a Comparison of the Epistles which bear his Name with the Acts of the Apostles and with one another, probably the most original of its author's works. It was followed in 1794 by the celebrated View of the Evidences of Christianity.

Paley's latitudinarian views are said to have debarred him from the highest positions in the Church. But for his services in defence of the faith the Bishop of London gave him a stall in St Paul's; the Bishop of Lincoln made him subdean of that cathedral, and the Bishop of Carlisle conferred upon him the rectory of Bishopwearmouth. During the remainder of his life his time was divided between Bishopwearmouth and Lincoln. He died on 25 May 1805.

Thought

Paley's Principles of Moral and Political Philosophy was one of the most influential philosophical texts in late Enlightenment Britain. It was cited in several Parliamentary debates over the corn laws and it remained a set textbook at Cambridge well into the Victorian era. Indeed, even Darwin was required to read it when he studied at Christ's College. The Evidences of Christianity was a critical essay of sorts that drew from Bishop Douglas's Criterion and Lardner's Credibility of the Gospel History. Like many thinkers of his day, his idea of revelation advocated the divine origin of Christianity by isolating it from the general history of mankind, whereas later writers find their chief argument in the continuity of the process of revelation.

Paley is also remembered for his contributions to the philosophy of religion, utilitarian ethics and Christian apologetics. In 1802 he published Natural Theology; or, Evidences of the Existence and Attributes of the Deity, his last book. As he states in the preface, he saw the book as a preamble to his other philosophical and theological books; in fact, he suggests that Natural Theology should be first and so that his readers could then peruse his other books according to their tastes. His main goal was to suggest that the world was designed and sustained by God. Such a book fell within the long tradition of natural theological works written during the Enlightenment; and this explains why Paley based much of his thought on Ray (1691) and Derham (1711) and Nieuwentyt (1730).

Although Paley devotes a chapter of Natural Theology to astronomy, the bulk of his examples were taken from medicine and natural history. "For my part," he says, "I take my stand in human anatomy"; elsewhere he insists upon "the necessity, in each particular case, of an intelligent designing mind for the contriving and determining of the forms which organized bodies bear." In making his argument, Paley employed a wide variety of metaphors and analogies. Perhaps the most famous is his analogy between a watch and the world. Historians, philosophers and theologians often call this the Watchmaker analogy and many a student has cited it in an exam. The germ of the idea is to be found in ancient writers who used sundials and ptolemiac epicycles to illustrate the divine order of the world. These types of examples can be seen in the work of the ancient philosopher Cicero, especially in his De natura deorum, ii. 87 and 97 (see Hallam, Literature of Europe, ii. 385, note.). During the Enlightenment, the watch analogy occurred in the writings of Robert Boyle and Joseph Priestley. Thus, Paley's use of the watch (and other mechanical objects like it) continued a long and fruitful tradition of analogical reasoning that was well received by those who read Natural Theology when it was published in 1802.

Relevance

Since Paley is often read in university courses that address the philosophy of religion, the timing of his design argument has sometimes perplexed modern philosophers. Earlier in the century David Hume had argued against notions of design with counter examples drawn from monstrosity, imperfect forms of testimony and probability. Although these examples may ring true with many twenty-first century readers, they did not appeal to most of Paley's eighteenth-century contemporaries. Notions of evidence and probability were different then and it took time for Hume's arguments to be accepted by the reading public; in fact his philosophical works sold poorly until agnostics like T H Huxley championed Hume's philosophy in the nineteenth century. By then Paley was long dead.

The face of the world has changed so greatly since Paley's day that we are apt to do less than justice to his undoubted merits. Using his own examples and those of others, he arranged his arguments, it has been said, with a general's eye. His style is lucid and his arguments appealed so much to the reading public that his book was a best seller for most of the nineteenth century. It appealed to the Victorian Evangelicalism and to the Oxford Movement alike - but for different reasons. Paley's views also influenced (both positively and negatively) theologians, philosophers and scientists. In addition to Political Philosophy Charles Darwin also read Natural Theology during his student years and later stated in his autobiography that he was initially convinced by the argument. His views, of course, changed with time. By the 1820s and 1830s, well-known liberals like Thomas Wakley and other radical editors of The Lancet were using Paley's aging examples to attack the establishment's control over medical and scientific education in Durham, London, Oxford and Cambridge. It also inspired the Earl of Bridgewater to commission the Bridgewater Treatises and the Society for the Promotion of Christian Knowledge to issue cheap reprints for the rising middle class.

Today Paley's name evokes both reverence and repulsion and his work is cited accordingly by authors seeking to frame the history of human thought. In this context, it should perhaps be remembered that Paley was a product of his time and that his Natural Theology, for better or for not, stands as a notable entry in the canon of Western thought.

Further reading

  • Brown, Colin, Miracles and the Critical Mind, Paternoster, Exeter UK/William B. Eerdmans, Grand Rapids, 1984.
  • Brooke, John H. Science and Religion: Some Historical Perspectives, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1991.
  • Clarke, M.L., Paley: Evidences for the Man, University of Toronto Press, Toronto, 1974.
  • Dodds, G. L. Paley, Wearside and Natural Theology, Sunderland, 2003.
  • Eddy, Matthew D., ‘The Science and Rhetoric of Paley’s Natural Theology’, Literature and Theology, 18 (2004), 1-22.
  • Fyfe, A. ‘Publishing and the classics: Paley’s Natural Theology and the nineteenth-century scientific canon’, Studies in the History and Philosophy of Science, 33 (2002), 433-55.
  • Gascoigne, J., ‘Rise and Fall of British Newtonian Natural Theology’, Science in Context, 2 (1988), 219-256.
  • Gillespie, N. C. ‘Divine Design and the Industrial Revolution. William Paley’s Abortive Reform of Natural Theology’, Isis, 81 (1990), 214-229.
  • Gilson, E., From Aristotle to Darwin and Back again: A Journey in Final Causality, Species, and Evolution, John Lyon (trans), Notre Dame Universiy Press, London 1984.
  • Knight, David. Science and Spirituality: The Volitile Connection, Routledge, London, 2004.
  • LeMahieu, D.L. The Mind of William Paley, Lincoln, Nebraska, 1976.
  • McAdoo, H. R., The Spirit of Anglicanism: A Survey of Anglican Theological Method in the Seventeenth Century (London, 1965).
  • McGrath, A. E., A Scientific Theology: Volume I, Nature, Continuum, Edinburgh, 2001.
  • Meadley, G. W. Memoirs of William Paley, to which is Added an Appendix, London, 1809.
  • Ospovat, D. The Development of Darwin’s Theory: Natural History, Natural Theology and Natural Selection, 1838-1859, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1995.
  • Paley, E. An Account of the Life and Writings of William Paley, [1825], Farnborough: Gregg, 1970; originally, this was the first volume of The Works of William Paley, London, 1825.
  • Paley, William, Natural Theology, with an introduction and notes by Matthew D. Eddy and David M. Knight, Oxford University Press, 2006.
  • Pelikan, J. Christianity and Classical Culture: The Metamorphosis of Natural Theology in the Christian Encounter with Hellenism, Yale University Press, New Haven, 1993.
  • Philipp, W. ‘Physicotheology in the Age of Enlightenment: Appearance and History’, Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century, 57 (1967), 1233-1267.
  • Porter, R. ‘Creation and Credence’, in Barry Barnes and Steven Shapin (eds), Natural Order: Historical Studies of Scientific Culture, Sage Press, Beverly Hills, 1979.
  • Raven, C. Natural Religion and Christian Theology, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1953.
  • Richards, R. J. The Romantic Conception of Life: Science and Philosophy in the Age of Goethe, Chicago University Press, Chicago, 2002.
  • Rose, J. The Intellectual Life of the British Working Classes, Yale University Press, New Haven, 2002.
  • Rosen, Frederick, Classical Utilitarianism from Hume to Mill (Routledge Studies in Ethics & Moral Theory), 2003. ISBN 0415220947
  • Rousseau, G. S. and Roy Porter (eds), The Ferment of Knowledge – Studies in the Historiography of Eighteenth Century Science, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1980.
  • St Clair, W. The Reading Nation in the Romantic Period, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2004.
  • Topham, J. R. ‘Science, natural theology, and evangelicalism in the early nineteenth century: Thomas Chalmers and the evidence controversy’, in D. N. Livingstone, D. G. Hart and M. A. Knoll, Evangelicals and Science in Historical Perspective (Oxford: 1999), 142-174.
  • Topham, J. R. ‘Beyond the “Common Context”: the Production and Reading of the Bridgewater Treatises’, Isis, 89 (1998), 233-62.
  • Viner, J. The Role of Providence in the Social Order, American Philosophical Society, Philadelphia, 1972.
  • Von Sydow, M. ‘Charles Darwin: A Christian undermining Christianity?’, in David M. Knight and Matthew D. Eddy, Science and Beliefs: From Natural Philosophy to Natural Science, Ashgate, Aldershot, 2005!!

External links

  • Works by William Paley at Project Gutenberg
  • http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/history/paley.html
  • http://www.utm.edu/research/iep/p/paley.htm
  • Paley, William (1809), Natural Theology: or, Evidences of the Existence and Attributes of the Deity (12th ed.), London: Printed for J. Faulder
  • http://williampaley.com
  • Except from William Paley's 1802 book Natural Theology [1]