Introduction
Jefferson’s contention that morality lies in sentiment and not in science is an important
one, especially since religious beliefs at the time were to an extent intertwined with science.
Many of the founding Fathers were deist, believing in a rational order of the universe in which
man could continuously improve his lot through understanding nature and the physical world.
As Wood wrote, “most of the founding fathers had not put much stock in religion, even
when they were regular churchgoers…they abhorred ‘that gloomy superstition disseminated by
ignorant illiberal preachers’ and looked forward to the day when ‘the phantom of darkness will
be dispelled by the rays of science...’”
148
Cooper even allows Richard to boastfully describe the
town’s house of worship as “the most scientific church in the country.”
149
It is very important not to underestimate the importance of science, or at least practical
reason, in the young republic. Science and reason were needed to understand and tame a new
continent in a new political – and economic - system. Alexis de Tocqueville wrote “those who
cultivate the sciences amongst a democratic people are always afraid of losing their way in
visionary speculation. They mistrust systems; they adhere closely to the facts, and study facts
with their own senses.”
150
But science was also just coming into its own in America, and then only truly in the
cities. For example, Philadelphia would become an important center for the study of “vertebrate
paleontology,’’ but “the institutional developments that would make this possible were still in
embryo in 1815,” according to John C. Greene.
151
Until roughly the end of the 18
th
century and
early 19
th
century, Greene wrote, American science was essentially “a branch of British science”
148
Wood, Radicalism 330
149
Cooper 51
150
Heffner 163
151
John C. Greene, “American Science Comes of Age, 1780-1820,”
The Journal of American History
, Vol.
55, No. 1. (Jun., 1968):39
37
that depended on Europe for everything other than “native talent and the raw data provided by
nature.”
152
Yet American science had its own distinct flavor. As I. Bernard Cohen wrote, “the
American nation was conceived in a historical period that is generally known as the
Enlightenment, or the great Age of Reason, and science was then esteemed as the highest form of
human rationality.”
153
According to de Tocqueville, this American flavor was decidedly practical
in nature and “hardly anyone in the United States devotes himself to the essentially theoretical
and abstract portion of human knowledge.”
154
Instead, Americans were more enamored with applied science, with putting knowledge
into practical effect. In The Pioneers, particularly applied science and knowledge, is the
underpinning of Temple’s desire to produce a self-sustaining, profitable and rationally ordered
community. Cooper shows us not only the budding reliance on science, reason and education in
the new republic to create practical systems, but also the infancy and shortcomings of some of
the ventures it supported. Although the systems were imperfect, that did not deter the settlers
from trying to apply them to their new home, regardless of what stood in their way.
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