Biology Reference
In-Depth Information
27
Stephen Toulmin, “Introduction: The End of the Copernican era?” in The
Nature of Scientific Discovery: A Symposium Commemorating the 500th Anniversary
of the Birth of Nicolaus Copernicus , ed. Owen Gingerich (Washington, D.C.:
Smithsonian Institution, 1975), 189-98.
28
Ben-David, Scientist's Role , 75-87.
29
On Bacon as the mediator of the Puritan perspective, see especially John
Channing Briggs, “Bacon's Science and Religion,” in The Cambridge Compan-
ion to Bacon , ed. Marakku Peltonen (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
1996), 172-99; Jacob, Cultural Meaning , 76-84; see also Richard Westfall, Sci-
ence and Religion in Seventeenth-Century England (New Haven, Conn.: Yale Uni-
versity Press, 1958), 106-45; Charles Webster, The Great Instauration: Science,
Medicine and Reform 1626-1660 (New York: Holmes & Meier, 1976), 12-25;
Antonio Pérez-Ramos, Francis Bacon's Science and the Maker's Knowledge Tradi-
tion (Oxford: Clarendon, 1988), 12-16.
30
Harold Fisch, Jerusalem and Albion: The Hebraic Factor in Seventeenth-Century
Literature (New York: Schocken, 1964), 86.
31
Jacob, Cultural Meaning , 78.
32
Bacon, Work s , 4:372.
33
Bacon, Work s , 4:104, 11.
34
Webster, Great Instauration , 508.
35
Daniel Murphy, Comenius: A Critical Assessment of His Life and Work (Dublin:
Irish Academic, 1995), 70-78.
36
Robert Fitzgibbon Young, Comenius in England (1932; reprint, New York:
Arno, 1971), 25-48; Dorothy Stimson, Scientists and Amateurs: A History of the
Royal Society (New York: Henry Schuman, 1948), 8; G. H. Turnbull, Hartlib,
Dury and Comenius: Gleanings from Hartlib's Papers (London: University Press of
Liverpool, 1947), 1-88.
37
The term appears in the correspondence of Robert Boyle on three different
occasions between 1646 and 1647. Harold Hartley, ed., The Royal Society: Its
Origins and Founders (London: Royal Society, 1960), 21-23.
38
Young, Comenius in England , 64; Stephen Clucas, “In Search of 'The True
Logick': Methodological Eclecticism Among the 'Baconian Reformers,'” in
Samuel Hartlib and Universal Reformation: Studies in Intellectual Communication ,
ed. Mark Greengrass, Michael Leslie, and Timothy Raylor (Cambridge: Cam-
bridge University Press, 1994), 53; Malcolm Oster, “Millenarianism and the
New Science: The Case of Robert Boyle,” in Greengrass, Leslie, and Raylor,
Samuel Hartlib , 137-48.
39
John Amos Comenius, Via Lucis , trans. E. T. Compagnac (London: Hodder
& Stoughton, 1938), 173.
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