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For Stove, the ascription of absurdity to Victorian culture was essentially a matter of Taste , but one so powerful and irrational that it possessed the intensity of religious faith. As a result it produced a revulsion – rather than a reasoned scepticism – to writers such as the Victorian philosopher of science William Whewell . Following Stove's usage, the term was taken up by the design historian Shelagh Wilson to refer to modernist distaste for Victorian Architecture and design. Wilson argued that "Palissyite" design, influenced by the methods of Bernard Palissy , had been ridiculed and misunderstood by proponents of "Puginite" design, following the proto-modernist principles of Augustus Pugin . Wilson's argument formed part of a reaffirmation of the aesthetic principles of the Grotesque . The argument that distaste for Victorian cultural values (' Anti-victorianism ') is irrational has been adopted by other writers,either following Stove's politically conservative attack on Liberal Thought , or Wilson's critique of modernism. Stove's thesis that the Modernists such as Popper rejected Whewell is challenged when one considers Peter Medawar 's essay on Popper in Schilpp's ''The Philosophy of Karl Popper'', in which Popper is shown to be, in some respects, a sympathetic elaboration of Whewell. That Whewell anticipates many of Popper's ideas is acknowledged by Popper himself in his reply to Medawar. NOTES |
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