The seventeenth century was the time of the
development of various branches of science. The new mood had been established
by Francis Bacon. Bacon was a lawyer who entered Parliament early and became
James I's Lord Chancellor. Bacon had a wide range of scholarly interests. He
had the reputation of being the most learned man of his time. Francis Bacon's
goal was synthesis He wanted to organize 'all knowledge' in a united whole. He
defined the scientific method in a form that is still relevant and stimulates
the growth of science. Every scientific idea, he argued, must be tested by
experiment. With idea and experiment following one the other, the whole natural
world would be understood. In the rest of the century British scientists put
these ideas into practice.
Bacon made a great contribution to historical writing.
He was a master stylist - his scientific works can be read with pleasure, as
literature. He saw himself as an intellectual Columbus, revealing the new world
of science to his contemporaries, and bringing back ships freighted with useful
knowledge. In his "New Atlantis" Bacon described an island governed
by an Academy of Sciences, founded 'for the knowledge of causes, and secret
motion of things; and the enlarging the bounds of human empire, to the effecting
of I all things possible'. This is the most accessible and exciting of his
writings on science.
In his essay "Of Study" Francis Bacon
regards studies as they should be: for pleasure, for self-improvement, for
business. He I considers the evils of excess study: laziness, affectation, and
preciosity, Bacon divides books into three categories: those to be read I in
part, those to be read casually, and those to be read with care. I Studies
should include reading, which gives depth: speaking, I which adds readiness of
thought; and writing, which trains in preciseness. The author ascribes certain
virtues to individual fields of study: wisdom to history, wit to poetry,
subtlety to mathematics, and depth to natural philosophy. This essay has
intellectual appeal indeed.
Meanwhile, scientists, were demystifying the universe.
Nobody knows for sure who invented the telescope, but Galileo Galilei had built
one of his own. With it he was able to confirm the heretical speculations of
Copernicus, Kepler and Tycho Brahe that the sun, not the earth, was the center
of our universe. The specific origins of the microscope are equally obscure. In
the 17th century, Robert Hooke used it to describe accurately the anatomy of a
flea and the design of a feather; Antonie de Leeuwenhoek discovered a world of
wriggling organisms in a drop of water. The invention of logarithms and
calculus led to more accurate clocks and optical instruments.
By 1700 Galileo, Rene Descartes, Sir Isaac Newton and
other scientists had clarified the principles by which machines work.
Henceforth Western civilization's technological supremacy was beyond challenge.
Mechanical invention led inevitably to another step in the West's commercial
and political hegemony over the world: the Industrial Revolution.