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Leviathan and the Air-Pump - Hobbes, Boyle, and the Experimental Life (Paperback, Revised edition)
Loot Price: R526
Discovery Miles 5 260
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Leviathan and the Air-Pump - Hobbes, Boyle, and the Experimental Life (Paperback, Revised edition)
Series: Princeton Classics
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List price R612
Loot Price R526
Discovery Miles 5 260
You Save R86 (14%)
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Leviathan and the Air-Pump examines the conflicts over the value
and propriety of experimental methods between two major
seventeenth-century thinkers: Thomas Hobbes, author of the
political treatise Leviathan and vehement critic of systematic
experimentation in natural philosophy, and Robert Boyle, mechanical
philosopher and owner of the newly invented air-pump. The issues at
stake in their disputes ranged from the physical integrity of the
air-pump to the intellectual integrity of the knowledge it might
yield. Both Boyle and Hobbes were looking for ways of establishing
knowledge that did not decay into ad hominem attacks and political
division. Boyle proposed the experiment as cure. He argued that
facts should be manufactured by machines like the air-pump so that
gentlemen could witness the experiments and produce knowledge that
everyone agreed on. Hobbes, by contrast, looked for natural law and
viewed experiments as the artificial, unreliable products of an
exclusive guild. The new approaches taken in Leviathan and the
Air-Pump have been enormously influential on historical studies of
science. Shapin and Schaffer found a moment of scientific
revolution and showed how key scientific givens--facts,
interpretations, experiment, truth--were fundamental to a new
political order. Shapin and Schaffer were also innovative in their
ethnographic approach. Attempting to understand the work habits,
rituals, and social structures of a remote, unfamiliar group, they
argued that politics were tied up in what scientists did, rather
than what they said. Steven Shapin and Simon Schaffer use the
confrontation between Hobbes and Boyle as a way of understanding
what was at stake in the early history of scientific
experimentation. They describe the protagonists' divergent views of
natural knowledge, and situate the Hobbes-Boyle disputes within
contemporary debates over the role of intellectuals in public life
and the problems of social order and assent in Restoration England.
In a new introduction, the authors describe how science and its
social context were understood when this book was first published,
and how the study of the history of science has changed since then.
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