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Baroque Science

Contributor(s): Gal, Ofer (Author)

ISBN: 9780226212982

Publisher: University of Chicago Press

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Pub Date: July 21, 2014

Dewey: 509

LCCN: 2012043141

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Bibliography, Illustrated

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.90" H x 8.90" L x 6.00" W ( 1.05 lbs) 352 pages

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: In Baroque Science, Ofer Gal and Raz Chen-Morris present a radically new perspective on the scientific revolution of the seventeenth century. Instead of celebrating the triumph of reason and rationality, they study the paradoxes and anxieties that stemmed from the New Science and the intellectual compromises that shaped it and enabled its spectacular success.

Gal and Chen-Morris show how the protagonists of the new mathematical natural philosophy grasped at the very far and very small by entrusting observation to the mediation of artificial instruments, and how they justified this mediation by naturalizing and denigrating the human senses. They show how the physical-mathematical ordering of heavens and earth demanded obscure and spurious mathematical procedures, replacing the divine harmonies of the late Renaissance with an assemblage of isolated, contingent laws and approximated constants. Finally, they show how the new savants, forced to contend that reason is hopelessly estranged from its surrounding world and that nature is irreducibly complex, turned to the passions to provide an alternative, naturalized foundation for their epistemology and ethics.

Enforcing order in the face of threatening chaos, blurring the boundaries of the natural and the artificial, and mobilizing the passions in the service of objective knowledge, the New Science, Gal and Chen-Morris reveal, is a Baroque phenomenon: deeply entrenched in and crucially formative of the culture of its time.

Brief description: Raz Chen-Morris is a senior lecturer in the Science, Technology, and Society Program at Bar-Ilan University.

Review Quotes: "Gal and Chen-Morris have mastered a diverse set of sources to support their claim that the 'New Science' developed from the tensions in the baroque era. This important work will provide scholars with new questions and offer opportunities to reconsider timeless questions about the nature of humanity and knowledge. Highly recommended."--G. D. Oberle III, Germanna Community College "Choice"

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