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The Scientific Revolution

Essay by   •  December 24, 2010  •  Essay  •  999 Words (4 Pages)  •  1,418 Views

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The beginnings of the Scientific Revolution date back to 1543, when Copernicus first suggested that the sun was the center of the universe. While this was said to be a radical idea, the ideas and philosophies that belonged to Francis Bacon and Rene Descartes were far more radical. Both men are considered to be revolutionaries of the period.

Bacon's work Novum Organum, Latin for "new instrument" was first published in 1620, the title was referring to the human mind. The laws of nature can only be discovered by "questioning nature herself and not by arguing..." Bacon said. He proposed a new method of "induction" to arrive at answers. Previously, scientists had started with a broad question or subject and skipped around until they came to a specific answer. This often led to overlooking or leaving out important facts and ideas. Bacon said that induction was the proper way to go about "driving out Idols of the Mind," which was the discussion of prejudices. Bacon felt this was slowing down the progression of the sciences.

Bacon believed that another reason that the sciences were not progressing was because there was no fixed end. He said that the "true and genuine End of the Sciences" is to enrich human life with "new inventions and new powers." Another reason that Bacon blamed on the slow progression was that people used the information for their own benefit. In addition to this, Bacon criticized the education system. He said that there were too many particulars with the old method and that the minds were not prepared for this.

Bacon's proposition of the new method was a counter of medieval sciences, otherwise knows as the old method. The old method consisted of finding truth based in logic. This method which had been instituted by the church started with a premise and built upon the original assumption. Bacon's new method was called induction. Induction is the process of starting with specifics and gradually moving to the more general subject. In the old method, one could make huge leaps between ideas, but with the New Method, Bacon says "Ð'...when, by continued Steps, like real Stairs, uninterrupted or broken, Men shall ascend from particulars to lesser Axioms," An axiom being a truth on which other knowledge is built.

Bacon's new method was born of the Enlightenment which produced skepticism and doubt and Enlightened thinkers, was that the new method questioned accepted authority. The conclusions produced were independent of the church, and therefore challenged the authority of the church.

Rene Descartes was a French philosopher, educated by Jesuits. He is also the man that keyed the phrase, "I think, therefore I am." Descartes based his knowledge on concrete evidence and was the same way with his philosophy, which he based only on true knowledge. Descartes felt that the scientists of the past only cared about ideas that were really abstract and did not seem to be of use. Like Bacon, Descartes appears to criticize the education system of the middle ages, he says in his work A Discourse on Method, "Ð'...there results an art full of confusion and obscurity calculated to embarrass, instead of a science fitted to cultivate the mind." However, while Bacon promoted the idea of induction, working from particulars to generalizations, Descartes defended the process of deduction, which was working from generalizations to particulars.

Descartes goes on to say that the fewer the rules the better (he uses it in terms of the government; however, it is clear he is alluding to the sciences). He offers four rules in Discourse which he believes would simplify and that would be enough for him. His first law was to

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