Francis Bacon: Discovery and the Art of DiscourseCambridge University Press, 1974 - 267 من الصفحات By modern standards Bacon's writings are striking in their range and diversity, and they are too often considered a separate specialist concerns in isolation from each other. Dr Jardine finds a unifying principle in Bacon's preoccupation with 'method', the evaluation and organisation of information as a procedure of investigation or of presentation. She shows how such an interpretation makes consistent (and often surprising) sense of the whole corpus of Bacon's writings: how the familiar but misunderstood inductive method for natural science relations to the more information strategies of argument in his historical, ethical, political and literary work. There is a substantial and valuable study of the intellectual Renaissance background from which Bacon emerged and against which he reacted. Through a series of details comparisons and contrasts we are led to appreciate the true originality and ingenuity of Bacon's own views and also to discount the more superficial resemblances between them and later developments in the philosophy of science. |
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المحتوى
Dialectic and method in the sixteenth | 17 |
An English dialectical controversy | 59 |
Bacons theory of knowledge | 76 |
The goal of the interpretation of nature | 109 |
Analogy and generalisation in natural | 133 |
Analogy and generalisation in ethics | 157 |
Methods of communication | 169 |
Exempla | 194 |
Bacons view of rhetoric | 216 |
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
Francis Bacon: Discovery and the Art of Discourse <span dir=ltr>Lisa Jardine</span> لا تتوفر معاينة - 2009 |
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
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