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Richard Holmes

The Age of Wonder

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  • Keysleen Aohas quoted6 years ago
    The notion of an infinite, mysterious Nature, waiting to be discovered or seduced into revealing all her secrets
  • Keysleen Aohas quoted6 years ago
    a Mind for ever
    Voyaging through strange seas of Thought, alone
  • Keysleen Aohas quoted6 years ago
    its ideal of subjectivity eternally opposed to that of scientific objectivity.
  • Keysleen Aohas quoted6 years ago
    its ideal of subjectivity eternally opposed to that of scientific objectivity.
  • b2909329086has quoted7 years ago
    onely and perilous, is in one form or another a central and defining m
  • Anette Teillehas quoted7 years ago
    But it draws in many other lives, and it is interrupted by many episodes of scientific endeavour and high adventure so characteristic of the Romantic spirit: ballooning, exploring, soul-hunting. These were all part of the great journey.♣
  • Anette Teillehas quoted7 years ago
    But the first Wonder is the Offspring of Ignorance; the last is the Parent of Adoration
  • Anette Teillehas quoted7 years ago
    The scientific revolution of the late seventeenth century had promulgated an essentially private, elitist, specialist form of knowledge. Its lingua franca was Latin, and its common currency mathematics. Its audience was a small (if international) circle of scholars and savants. Romantic science, on the other hand, had a new commitment to explain, to educate, to communicate to a general public.
    This became the first great age of the public scientific lecture, the laboratory demonstration and the introductory textbook, often written by women. It was the age when science began to be taught to children, and the ‘experimental method’ became the basis of a new, secular philosophy of life, in which the infinite wonders of Creation (whether divine or not) were increasingly valued for their own sake. It was a science that, for the first time, generated sustained public debates, such as the great Regency controversy over ‘Vitalism’: whether there was such a thing as a life force or principle, or whether men and women (or animals) had souls.
  • Anette Teillehas quoted7 years ago
    cosmology.
    The ideal of a pure, ‘disinterested’ science, independent of political ideology and even religious doctrine, also began slowly to emerge
  • Anette Teillehas quoted7 years ago
    Romantic science would seek to identify such moments of singular, almost mystical vision in its own history. One of its first and most influential examples was to become the story of the solitary, brooding Newton in his orchard, seeing an apple fall and ‘suddenly’ having his vision of universal gravitation. This story was never told by Newton at the time, but only began to emerge in the mid-eighteenth century, in a series of memoirs and reminiscences.♣
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