Professor Rob Iliffe
Rob Iliffe is Professor of History of Science at Oxford, Co-Director of the Oxford Centre for the History of Science, Medicine and Technology, and a General Editor of the Newton Project. He is the author of A Very Short Introduction to Newton (OUP 2007) and Priest of Nature: the Religious Worlds of Isaac Newton, (OUP 2017), and co-editor of The Cambridge Companion to Isaac Newton, 2nd ed. (CUP, 2016). He was editor of History of Science from 2001-8 and is currently co-editor of Annals of Science. He has published widely on topics in the history of early modern and Enlightenment science, and particularly on historical interactions between science and religion, scientific voyages of discovery, the life and work of Isaac Newton, the development of ideas about scientific genius and scientific creativity, and the role of scientific instruments in scientific innovation.
At Oxford he teaches general Undergraduate course on history of science and technology courses as well as more specialized courses on the Scientific Revolution, the history of modern physics, and the history of scientific racism and eugenics. At Postgraduate level he teaches courses on the Scientific Revolution and on Evolution and Neo-Malthusianism from 1840 to 1970.
Topics being studied by Professor Iliffe's current DPhil students include the circulation of utopian ideas within Europe from 1500-1700; Samuel Hartlib and English colonialism; the chronological research of Isaac Newton; the scientific and religious thought of Kang Youwei; the geological and ceramic projects of Alexandre Brongniart; the development of Virtual Reality technology in the United States 1965-2005.
Research Interests
My research interests lie within the following headings:
- environmental history
- history of religion
- History of science
- Isaac Newton
- material culture and science
- relations between science and religion
In the Media
Inaugural Lecture: Science Fictions: The triumph of the imagination and the invention of scientific creativity
Current DPhil Students
Teaching
I would like to hear from potential DPhil students in any areas of my research interests (see under Research)
I currently teach:
Masters:
- Methods and Themes in the History of Science and Technology
- Malthus, Darwin and Society, 1790-1950
- The Scientific Revolution, 1540-1740
Chemistry Undergraduate Supplementary Subject:
- History and Philosophy of Science