Knowledge and the Public Interest, 1575–1725
Autor Vera Kelleren Limba Engleză Paperback – 31 mai 2017
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781107526013
ISBN-10: 1107526019
Pagini: 360
Ilustrații: 12 b/w illus.
Dimensiuni: 153 x 230 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.53 kg
Editura: Cambridge University Press
Colecția Cambridge University Press
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1107526019
Pagini: 360
Ilustrații: 12 b/w illus.
Dimensiuni: 153 x 230 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.53 kg
Editura: Cambridge University Press
Colecția Cambridge University Press
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Cuprins
1. Collecting the future in the early modern past; Part I. Origins: 2. Knowledge in ruins; 3. A charlatan's promise; Part II. Inventing the Wish List: 4. Jakob Bornitz and the joy of things; 5. Francis Bacon's new world of sciences; 6. Things fall apart: desiderata in the Hartlib circle; 7. Rebelling against useful knowledge; Part III. Institutionalizing Desire: 8. Restoring societies: the Orphean charms of science; 9. What men want: the private and public interests of the Royal Society; 10. Enemy camps: desiderata and priority disputes; 11. Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz and the hubris of the wish list; 12. Georg Hieronymus Welsch's fiction of consensus; 13. Wish lists enter the Academy: a new intellectual economy; 14. No final frontiers.
Recenzii
'Vera Keller develops a strikingly new perspective on early modern science by focusing on the genre of the wish list and its spread in English- and German-speaking contexts across the long seventeenth century. Ambitious goals that promised the fulfilment of political and economic desires amid an awareness of the precariousness of knowledge motivated a host of fascinating characters, from charlatans to major philosophers. In her richly researched analysis Keller shows how the early modern pursuit of desiderata fostered an ideal of sustained collaborative research that has endured to this day.' Ann Blair, Harvard University, Massachusetts
'This is the mature, highly original, and fascinating book of a still young scholar. It brings together fields of research that have rarely been connected: history of science, economics, and political thought. Keller not only discovers the desiderata list as an object of historical research and gives for the first time its history - she also uses this topic to make wide-ranging statements about the so-called scientific revolution and the emergence of modernity.' Martin Mulsow, Universität Erfurt, Germany
'Keller's book provides a fresh look at the scientific revolution centered on the key notions of wish lists, advancement of learning, and reason of state. By bringing to the fore the complementary notions of desire and passion, and by taking into account the role of economic transformations and political thought in the early modern period, Keller urges readers to reconsider the controversial historiographic category of scientific revolution. Concentrating on such authors as Giovanni Botero, Guido Pancirolli, Trajano Boccalini, Jakob Bornitz, and Francis Bacon, Keller connects in an original way the parallel emergence of experimental science and reason of state as indicative of a broader shift in the early modern culture.' Guido Giglioni, The Warburg Institute, London
'Vera Keller's fascinating book aims to trace a pivotal shift in the understanding of scientific knowledge in early modern Europe, in the ways such knowledge was (and ought to be) pursued, and in the principal justifications for pursuing it. Supported by her admirably thorough research, she connects the rise of modern, collaborative scientific endeavor with the conception of a 'public interest' in mastering nature, and uses as the central tool of her investigation the development of desiderata, lists of desired knowledge in need of (re)discovery.' Eric H. Ash, Early Science and Medicine
'In this erudite work Keller traces the long transition, from the Scientific Revolution to the cusp of the Enlightenment, of what Francis Bacon once described as a 'wish list' of desiderata, often since tied to early modern notions of usefulness. This is a tour de force, an impressive reach into Continental sources seldom related to the creation of Western European academies of science and refining the notion of a public interest.' Larry Stewart, Isis
'This is the mature, highly original, and fascinating book of a still young scholar. It brings together fields of research that have rarely been connected: history of science, economics, and political thought. Keller not only discovers the desiderata list as an object of historical research and gives for the first time its history - she also uses this topic to make wide-ranging statements about the so-called scientific revolution and the emergence of modernity.' Martin Mulsow, Universität Erfurt, Germany
'Keller's book provides a fresh look at the scientific revolution centered on the key notions of wish lists, advancement of learning, and reason of state. By bringing to the fore the complementary notions of desire and passion, and by taking into account the role of economic transformations and political thought in the early modern period, Keller urges readers to reconsider the controversial historiographic category of scientific revolution. Concentrating on such authors as Giovanni Botero, Guido Pancirolli, Trajano Boccalini, Jakob Bornitz, and Francis Bacon, Keller connects in an original way the parallel emergence of experimental science and reason of state as indicative of a broader shift in the early modern culture.' Guido Giglioni, The Warburg Institute, London
'Vera Keller's fascinating book aims to trace a pivotal shift in the understanding of scientific knowledge in early modern Europe, in the ways such knowledge was (and ought to be) pursued, and in the principal justifications for pursuing it. Supported by her admirably thorough research, she connects the rise of modern, collaborative scientific endeavor with the conception of a 'public interest' in mastering nature, and uses as the central tool of her investigation the development of desiderata, lists of desired knowledge in need of (re)discovery.' Eric H. Ash, Early Science and Medicine
'In this erudite work Keller traces the long transition, from the Scientific Revolution to the cusp of the Enlightenment, of what Francis Bacon once described as a 'wish list' of desiderata, often since tied to early modern notions of usefulness. This is a tour de force, an impressive reach into Continental sources seldom related to the creation of Western European academies of science and refining the notion of a public interest.' Larry Stewart, Isis
Notă biografică
Descriere
This study shows that modernity has its origins in the advancement of knowledge, and not in the Scientific Revolution.