20 May 1934(1934-05-20) (aged 60) Edinburgh, Scotland
Pen name
J. Y. Simpson
Occupation
Writer
biographer
lecturer
diplomat
scientist
theologian
Genre
non-fiction, biography, theology
Spouse
Helen Huntingdon Day
Professor James Young Simpson (3 August 1873 – 20 May 1934) FRSEFRSSAFRAI DJur(Hon) DSc(Hon) was a Scottish zoologist, writer, diplomat, biographer and theologian. After World War I, he was instrumental in establishing the Baltic states and Finland as independent nations.
In 1910, he was living at 25 Chester Street in Edinburgh's West End.[5]
He died on 20 May 1934 in Edinburgh. He is buried with his parents in the south-west section of Grange Cemetery close to the rear embankment behind the central vaults.
As a boy, he visited Paris with his father and was introduced to Louis Pasteur. Pasteur laid his hand on Simpson's head and exclaimed: "Travaillez, mon ami, travaillez!" [Work, my friend, work!] Turning to the father, he said "A-t-il dit, Oui?" [Has he said, yes?] Simpson seems to have implemented Pasteur's injunction throughout his life.[6]
In his writings, his dominant interest lay in showing the connection between science and religion. In his view, there is no contradiction between these, and he views Christianity as the natural outcome of man's evolutionary progress. Jesus Christ is "the fulfillment of all that went before. . . He is the Alpha and Omega of strictly human history." and so on.[7] In a later book, Nature: Cosmic, Human and Divine (1929), Simpson argues that religion results from the confrontation of Mind with the Infinite Energy of the universe as suggested by Heisenberg's indeterminacy principle.[8]
Simpson's association with Russia began when Prince Nicholas Galitsyn visited Edinburgh in the early 1890s. Simpson befriended him and accompanied him on a visit to Siberia in the summer and autumn of 1896.[9]
The object of the journey was to visit Siberian prisons and distribute bibles and other religious works to prisoners. Simpson made elaborate notes on the topography, agriculture, and customs of Siberia. These notes led to the publication of the book, Side-lights on Siberia in 1898. Subsequent books on Russia resulted from his regular visits to that country.
In September 1910, Simpson accompanied his father to a medical congress in Petrograd (now St. Petersburg) in Russia. On this one week's visit, he met Baron Nicolai and other Christians who were impressed by his reconciliation of Christianity with science.[10] His last visits to Russia were in 1916 and April/May 1917 before the Revolution took place.[11]
In 1919, Simpson worked with the British Delegation to the Peace Conference at Versailles to ensure that the Baltic States and Finland were established as independent states.[12] He was subsequently given awards by these countries in recognition of his services. His last visit to the Baltic States was in June/July 1932, when he received the honorary degree of Doctor of Law (D.Jur.) at the University of Tartu.[13]
The Spiritual Interpretation of Nature. London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1923. [1912]
Self-Discovery of Russia. London: Constable, 1916
Some notes on the State Sale-Monopoly and Subsequent Prohibition of Vodka in Russia. 1918
Man and the Attainment of Immortality. London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1922.
Contribution to Vol. VI of History of the Peace Conference at Paris, ed. by Harold Temperley. London: H. Frowde, and Hodder & Stoughton, 1920–24.
Landmarks in the Struggle Between Science and Religion. London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1925.
The Saburov memoirs: or, Bismarck and Russia; Being Fresh Light on the League of the Three Emperors, 1881, by Peter Alexandrovich Saburov. Translated and edited with an introduction by J.Y.Simpson, Cambridge University Press, 1929.
Nature: Cosmic, Human and Divine. Oxford: OUP, 1929, (Dwight Harrington Terry Foundation Lectures on religion in the light of science and philosophy, 1929).
World Politics and the Kingdom of God. John Clifford lecture; 1933
The Garment of the Living God. Studies in the relations of science and religion. The Sprunt lectures. With a 'Memoir' by George Freeland Barbour. [With a portrait.] London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1934.) The above photograph is taken from the frontispiece portrait in this book.
The Thoughtful Minute. [Essays. Reprinted from "The Weekly Scotsman".] London 1937.
Numerous articles in literary magazines and scientific journals.
^Man and the Attainment of Immortality. London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1922, p. 260.
^Nature: Cosmic, Human and Divine. Oxford: OUP, 1929, p.115f.
^'Memoir', p.24f. This Prince Nicholas Galitzin was not the famous Prince Nicholas Galitzine who was the last Tsarist Prime Minister of Russia. He was only distantly related to the latter.