The New Culture Movement promoted science as the proper way to understand the world. The active participants in the Movement who championed science and attacked Chinese traditions were often not scientists themselves. Was it possible to incorporate traditional natural knowledge into modern scientific practice?
This presentation will explore how scientists viewed and utilized historical sources by examining the weather proverbs collecting activities in Republican China. The history of meteorology has provided insight into how traditional meteorological ideas shaped the development of meteorology in China. Current literature tends to assume that scientists naturally recognized and acknowledged the scientific value of historical sources.
In contrast, I argue that social context played an important role in shaping such awareness. It was the iconoclasm in the New Culture Movement that raised the visibility of weather proverbs among meteorologists. More importantly, the development of weather forecasting in China, rather than dismissing weather proverbs, prompted meteorologists to draw on the folk wisdom. Therefore, by adding the perspective of scientists, this presentation shows a more complicated interaction between tradition and modern science in republican China.