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A centaur in London: reading and observation in early modern science
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Abstract
"A nuanced reframing of the dual importance of reading and observation for early modern naturalists. Historians of science traditionally argue that the sciences were born in early modern Europe during the so-called scientific revolution. At the heart of this narrative lays a supposed shift from the knowledge of books to the knowledge of things. The attitude of the new-style intellectual broke with the text-based practices of erudition and instead cultivated the new empiricism of observation and experiment. Instead of blindly trusting the authority of ancient sources such as Pliny and Aristotle, practitioners of the new experimental philosophy insisted upon experiential proof. In A Centaur in London, Fabian Kraemer calls a key tenet of this master narrative into question-that the rise of empiricism entailed a decrease in the importance of reading practices. Kraemer shows instead that the early practices of textual erudition and observational empiricism were by no means so remote from one another as the traditional narrative would suggest. Kraemer argues that reading books and reading the book of nature had a great deal in common-indeed, that reading texts was its own kind of observation. Especially in the case of rare and unusual phenomena like monsters, naturalists were dependent on the written reports of others who had experienced the good luck to be at the right place at the right time. The connections between compiling examples from texts and from observation were especially close in such cases. A Centaur in London combines the history of scholarly reading with the history of scientific observation to argue for the sustained importance of both throughout the Renaissance and provides a nuanced, textured portrait of early modern naturalists at work"-- Provided by publisher.
Contents
Three monstrous factoids -- Ulisse Aldrovandi's twofold "Pandechion" : collecting knowledge about monsters -- Observing correctly : on the ambivalent relationship of the Academia Naturae Curiosorum to monsters -- A centaur in London.
Publisher
Publication
Baltimore, Maryland: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2023
Year
Is about
Subject
Type
Language
Translated from
Classification
ISBN
- 9781421446318
- 1421446316
Annotations / title notes
Notes
An earlier version of this work was published as: Ein Zentaur in London : Lektüre und Beobachtung in der frühneuzeitlichen Naturforschung, Affalterbach : Didymos-Verlag, 2014.
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