The Thomas F. Torrance History of Science Collection

Footnote

The Thomas F. Torrance History of Science Collection, History of Science Collections, University of Oklahoma Libraries

Bibliography

The Thomas F. Torrance History of Science Collection. History of Science Collections. University of Oklahoma Libraries

Publication life cycle / General notes
  • List of books and papers received. Donors: Robert T. Walker, James B. Walker, Donald K. Walker, David W. Torrance, Bruce Ritchie, Andrew Torrance, Calum MacKellar, Roger J. Newell, and others. (View spreadsheet instead.)
  • Wanted List -- contact us if you want to donate any of these books. These are high priority items, but the list is not exhaustive. For example, we want to collect print copies of TFT, JBT, and DWT's chapters and articles, and unpublished papers not already preserved in existing institutional archives. See Scope description below.
  • For general inquiries or to discuss possible donations, acquisitions, or research fellowships, contact Prof. and Curator Kerry Magruder: kmagruder@ou.edu (Gifts and Donations).
  • The archive complements the book collection. Both will grow over coming years as we seek papers, recordings, and other materials that would not otherwise be preserved by the main theological archive at the Library of Princeton Theological Seminary. Materials are welcome that might be helpful to future scholars, in unforeseen cultural contexts, who wish to enter into the worlds and intellectual activities of Thomas F. Torrance, James B. Torrance, and David W. Torrance.
  • The above links are the most up-to-date, including recently-received and unprocessed items. The University of Oklahoma Libraries websites indicate items after they have been cataloged and processed. As the books are being cataloged, they will appear in the online catalog of the University of Oklahoma Libraries using the Advanced Search option: libraries.ou.edu. As the non-book materials are being processed, they will appear in the ArchivesSpace platform of the University of Oklahoma Libraries here: archives.libraries.ou.edu/repositories/4/resources/12347. The archive is organized into various “series.” A new series will be created for each new donor or subject, including participants in oral histories and figures of interest for science.

 


May 2022: The following description is provided by Dr. Kerry Magruder, Curator and John H. and Drusa B. Cable Chair, OU History of Science Collections.
Download or print: PDF summary.


Scope and Access

The Thomas F. Torrance History of Science Collection of the History of Science Collections of the University of Oklahoma recognizes Torrance’s significance for the history and philosophy of science, particularly in matters related to science and religion. We seek to preserve and make available:

  1. All of Torrance’s publications in their various editions.
  2. Modern sources upon which Torrance relied and engaged.
  3. Primary works of figures Torrance discussed, from antiquity through the 20th century.
  4. Unpublished materials, papers, and publications of Torrance's contemporaries and students who engaged him substantively on matters of science and religion and the history and philosophy of science.
  5. Unpublished materials, papers, and publications of scientists and scholars who, now and in the future, continue to engage Torrance substantively on matters of science and religion and the history and philosophy of science.

The Thomas F. Torrance History of Science Collection will consist of both books and other print publications, plus an archive of unpublished materials in varying formats. It will remain an open collection, augmented in an ongoing manner as new materials become available. 

The Thomas F. Torrance History of Science Collection was created in May, 2022, seeded with a small sampling of initial materials. It is now ready to acquire donated and purchased materials consistent with the scope described above. It is formally launched as of 2023, with substantial donations from Robert T. Walker, Donald K. Walker, James B. Walker, and others, as noted on each bibliographic record. It will become open to visiting scholars in 2024, with an online finding aid updated on an ongoing basis. The History of Science Collections is committed to an open access policy as far as donor wishes and copyright allow. 


History of Science Collections, University of Oklahoma

The OU History of Science Collections, founded in 1949 with an initial gift from Everette Lee DeGolyer, is a premier research collection. Its holdings include 100,000 print volumes across diverse disciplinary subject areas, along with current publications in the field. The Collections supports multidisciplinary research in every chronological period, geographic region, and subject area of science, technology, and medicine. Among the oldest items are a cuneiform brick (ca. 1300 BCE), and a number of medieval and early modern manuscripts. The Collections' oldest printed book is Hrabanus Maurus, Opus de universo (1467). Highlights include all the major works, scientific and non-scientific, of figures such as Copernicus, Tycho, Kepler, Galileo, Newton, Darwin, et al. Astronomy, physics, natural history, geology, technology, and science and religion are traditional areas of strength for the print holdings. Areas of recent concentration include women in science, Islamicate science, star maps, computer history, and science and technology in Asia. Holdings of the allied Western History Collections are of interest to scholars investigating the history of environmental science; science and Native American culture; or geology and natural history in the American West. Archives support research in the history of geology, meteorology, technology, and physics, among other topics. Digital collaborations include the Darwin Online project of Cambridge University (to which we have contributed more Darwin editions than any other collaborator other than Cambridge itself); the Galileo digital library of the Museo Galileo in Florence, Italy (which was launched with an event on the OU campus in recognition of our Galileo holdings and contributions to the project); and Edition Open Sources with the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science in Berlin. A travel fellowship program, endowed by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, supports short-term use of the Collections by visiting scholars. The Collections works closely with the Department of the History of Science in which the Curator is a faculty member. 


Rationale

The interdisciplinary topic of science and religion has long been a deep and comprehensive strength of the OU History of Science Collections’ print holdings, from before Galileo to Darwin and beyond. It is also a long-standing strength of the OU Department of the History of Science in terms of regular course offerings and faculty interests (including that of the Curator, Kerry Magruder). Yet in itself, “science and religion” involves an almost limitless scope. Creating a Torrance-related science and religion collection provides a distinctive and specific focus to build upon our renowned strengths in this area.

The papers of Torrance along with a collection of his books are found in the library of Princeton Theological Seminary. These have a theological focus. Papers relevant to his milieu and working environment remain in Edinburgh University. Neither of these archives meets the need of preserving materials and facilitating research on Torrance regarding his life’s work in science and religion and its continuing influence.

A lively academic society — the T. F. Torrance Theological Fellowship, an auxiliary organization of the American Academy of Religion — actively promotes Torrance research. Yet, despite a resurgence of scholarship on Torrance from the standpoint of theology over the last twenty years, his engagement with the natural sciences has thus far received scant attention from historians of science and from others with specific interest in Torrance’s own historical context. The complex contexts within which Torrance's ideas developed and spread are yet under-appreciated. Much more remains to be done to place Torrance’s engagement with science and religion in historical context. An academic infra-structure in the form of a dedicated collection will attract scholars and catalyze research.

Both the books and the scholars are already found here for the figures Torrance engaged, from Jean Philoponos (late antiquity) to Duns Scotus (Middle Ages) to Francis Bacon and Isaac Newton (early modern) to James Clerk Maxwell and Albert Einstein (modern), et al. The synergy between all five types of materials mentioned in the scope above makes the OU History of Science Collections an appropriate place for such a collection. (The Torrance Collection also complements the Edward B. Davis Collection in the history of science and religion.)

As we collect materials to establish the collection, we shall give priority to the Princeton Theological Seminary Library archive, of course, which remains the essential center for Torrance studies given that Torrance was first and foremost a theologian. Yet, as an auxiliary resource, we will complement their excellent work because of our distinctive emphasis on the scientific dimensions and ramifications of the Torrance tradition, including figures beyond the Torrances themselves who engaged in the natural sciences and whose papers might otherwise not be preserved. Perhaps future opportunities for collaboration between OU, Princeton, Edinburgh, and other institutions might arise with respect to joint grant proposals involving post-doctoral fellowship programs, conferences, and/or digitization projects.


Why T. F. Torrance?

Uniquely among leading theologians of the 20th century, Torrance engaged the natural sciences extensively on several fronts including the history and philosophy of science. After writing T. F. Torrance: An Intellectual Biography (1999), Alister McGrath, currently the Andreas Idreos Professor of Science and Religion at Oxford University, dedicated the first volume of his trilogy Nature (2001), Reality (2002), and Theory (2003) to “Thomas F. Torrance: A Scientific Theologian.”

Torrance was born in Chengdu, China, in the province of Sichuan, in 1913, and died in Edinburgh in 2007. In 1950 Torrance became professor of Church History, and later of Christian Dogmatics, in New College, the School of Divinity of the University of Edinburgh. He served as Moderator of the Church of Scotland, its highest honor, in 1976-1977. After receiving the 1978 Templeton Prize for Progress in Science and Religion, Torrance retired from New College in 1979 to pursue independent scholarship on various topics including science and religion (cf. bio by El Colyer).

In theological circles, T. F. Torrance is widely regarded as one of the most significant theologians of the 20th century for two reasons: Torrance became the leading facilitator of the reception of the theology of Karl Barth in the English-speaking world. In addition, Torrance was a leading figure in the 20th-century resurgence of theological work on the Trinity. These were monumental activities in theology.

Yet Torrance was also a major figure in the dialogue between science and religion – which might seem paradoxical given that neither the Trinity nor Barth’s theology seem at first glance particularly relevant to the natural sciences. But Torrance wrote 14 books engaging topics in science and religion (listed here) as well as numerous shorter publications. In addition, Torrance edited a book devoted to the philosopher of science Michael Polanyi, and edited the only separate edition of an important paper of James Clerk Maxwell, whose work Einstein regarded as the major achievement that made possible his theory of relativity. Torrance received the Templeton Prize (the “Nobel Prize” for science and religion), and was active in two relevant academic societies: the Académe Internationale des Sciences Religeuses from 1969, and the Académe Internationale de Philosophie des Sciences from 1976. He served as president of the former from 1972-1981. Torrance was involved in the prestigious Gifford Lectures on natural theology and edited two series of publications related to theology and science: “Theology and Scientific Culture” and “Theology and Science at the Frontiers of Knowledge.” He was a Fellow of the British Academy and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh.

The work and influence of Torrance upon the natural sciences has become relatively invisible to historians. For example, Michael Polanyi was one of the most significant philosophers of science of the 20th century. The text of a recent acclaimed study of Polanyi’s intellectual context and influence, written by a past president of the History of Science Society, fails to mention Torrance. Yet Torrance wrote several articles and edited a book about Polanyi’s work. Polanyi and Torrance were personal friends who mutually influenced one another and remained in dialogue from the 1960’s to the end of their lives. At the end of his life, Polanyi entrusted his papers to Torrance for safe-keeping, making Torrance executor of his literary estate. The relative invisibility of Torrance to historians of science will be addressed by the establishment of this collection.

Contents

If an item listed in either the Sources or the Studies bibliography of this website is contained in the Thomas F. Torrance History of Science Collection of the OU History of Science Collections, then it is tagged under the Access category (left sidebar) with the taxonomy term "OU HOS TFT Collection."

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