Chapter 21 - Reading 1
European 18th century: Christian faith was the answer to most basic questions
Some began to embrace rational inquiry and pursue the new science
Western science increased the political and military powers of Europeans
Joseph Banks (president of the Royal Society) linked scientific inquiry to real-world applications and economic purposes
Intellectual debate divided thinkers
Ancients: authority of Aristotle and other classical authors as the foundation of knowledge in fields such as medicine, math, and astronomy.
Modern: rejected classical authority & Christian theology, human reason as the key to knowledge, contradicted traditional Christian conceptions
Deductive reasoning: arguing from general principles to specific truth
Rene Descartes
Axioms of true philosophy had to be firmly grounded in the human capacity to reason
Logic could result in a unified system of truth
Systematic doubt as key to knowledge
Ability to reason as proof of existence
Modern science based on experimentation and observations of the natural world
Sir English Bacon:
Main proponents of an inductive approach to science
Controlled observations to larger truth
Tycho Brahe:
Using only the naked eye to observe
Challenged Aristotelian concept of an eternally unchanging celestial sphere
Demonstrated that a bright supernova had emerged beyond the Earth's atmosphere
Johannes Kepler:
Applied Brahe's data to analyze the orbit of the planet Mars
Showed that planetary motion was elliptical rather than circular
Challenged Aristotle and Christian teaching that all celestial motion was circular (perfect movement for perfect heavenly domain) and reinforced Galileo
Identical laws prevail throughout the universe and those laws can be described using math
New ideas caused discomfort in the early 17th century. A century later, science was on the rise and more Europeans began to reason and use their senses to observe nature.
Isaac Newton
Used deductive thinking to establish general principles
Used Bacon's inductive approach to experimental science
The universal law of gravitation: All matter exerts gravitational attraction in inverse proportion to mass and distance
Inventors of differential calculus
Tension between science and faith began to ease starting the early 18th century.
Scientists began to systematically collect and organize a catalogue of the world's flora
Carl Linnaeus
Pioneering figure in modern botany
Gathered plants specimens, restored botanical gardens, send his students around the world to gather specimens for study
Published his classification of living things
The Linnaean system orders species into hierarchical categories: genus/order/class/kingdom
Developed the binomial system of Latin names of organism
World's plants already had names but fit not consistent network of classification
Created a single knowledge system
Joseph Banks
Adept at deriving practical economic lessons from Carl Linnaeus's works
Leading figure in the drive for improvement: using scientific methods to increase the productivity of existing land and bring new land under cultivation
Bring insights gained from natural science to agriculture
Improve soil by sowing clover and turnips in fields
Selective breeding of livestock to boost the production of wool, meat, and milk
Wealthy gentle famer, invested in water engineering tech
Experimented with crop rotation and crossbreeding farm animals
Agriculture revolution led to more arable land for planting and greater efficiency in production
Increased food supplies supported urbanization during the industrial revolution
Agriculture led to greater inequality
Village society was oriented toward stability and security; common access to pasture and woodlands
New law allowed the English gentry to accumulate larger landholdings; allowing them to enclose common lands as private property
Food security matter less than productivity and profitable crops sales
Rural families could no longer sustain themselves; they drift to cities and coal mines for employment
"One person's improvement, therefore, could be another's ticket to unemployment."
Interests of the gentry was well represented in the Parliament and in the courts, those of the poor were not.
Joseph Banks advocated for improvement on the imperial stage
Globalizing the practical application of science through his advocacy of economic botany
Developed a experimental facility at Kew Gardens
Scientists brought new plant specimens from around the world to be examined, catalogued, and cultivated
Biological diffusion
British Navy needed secure supplies of timber, English botanists identified South Asian mahogany as a supplement to British and North American oak
Use of science to justify the dominance of the British elite at home and abroad
Believed that they would ultimately benefit from scientifically rational agriculture.
British colonization in Ireland
Claimed that the Irish were not using land efficiently, legally seized to make it more civil.
Australia
Regarded as empty land because its aboriginal inhabitants had not improved it
Justified their empire by claiming it created the best possible life for locals
European 18th century: Christian faith was the answer to most basic questions
Some began to embrace rational inquiry and pursue the new science
Western science increased the political and military powers of Europeans
Joseph Banks (president of the Royal Society) linked scientific inquiry to real-world applications and economic purposes
Intellectual debate divided thinkers
Ancients: authority of Aristotle and other classical authors as the foundation of knowledge in fields such as medicine, math, and astronomy.
Modern: rejected classical authority & Christian theology, human reason as the key to knowledge, contradicted traditional Christian conceptions
Deductive reasoning: arguing from general principles to specific truth
Rene Descartes
Axioms of true philosophy had to be firmly grounded in the human capacity to reason
Logic could result in a unified system of truth
Systematic doubt as key to knowledge
Ability to reason as proof of existence
Modern science based on experimentation and observations of the natural world
Sir English Bacon:
Main proponents of an inductive approach to science
Controlled observations to larger truth
Tycho Brahe:
Using only the naked eye to observe
Challenged Aristotelian concept of an eternally unchanging celestial sphere
Demonstrated that a bright supernova had emerged beyond the Earth's atmosphere
Johannes Kepler:
Applied Brahe's data to analyze the orbit of the planet Mars
Showed that planetary motion was elliptical rather than circular
Challenged Aristotle and Christian teaching that all celestial motion was circular (perfect movement for perfect heavenly domain) and reinforced Galileo
Identical laws prevail throughout the universe and those laws can be described using math
New ideas caused discomfort in the early 17th century. A century later, science was on the rise and more Europeans began to reason and use their senses to observe nature.
Isaac Newton
Used deductive thinking to establish general principles
Used Bacon's inductive approach to experimental science
The universal law of gravitation: All matter exerts gravitational attraction in inverse proportion to mass and distance
Inventors of differential calculus
Tension between science and faith began to ease starting the early 18th century.
Scientists began to systematically collect and organize a catalogue of the world's flora
Carl Linnaeus
Pioneering figure in modern botany
Gathered plants specimens, restored botanical gardens, send his students around the world to gather specimens for study
Published his classification of living things
The Linnaean system orders species into hierarchical categories: genus/order/class/kingdom
Developed the binomial system of Latin names of organism
World's plants already had names but fit not consistent network of classification
Created a single knowledge system
Joseph Banks
Adept at deriving practical economic lessons from Carl Linnaeus's works
Leading figure in the drive for improvement: using scientific methods to increase the productivity of existing land and bring new land under cultivation
Bring insights gained from natural science to agriculture
Improve soil by sowing clover and turnips in fields
Selective breeding of livestock to boost the production of wool, meat, and milk
Wealthy gentle famer, invested in water engineering tech
Experimented with crop rotation and crossbreeding farm animals
Agriculture revolution led to more arable land for planting and greater efficiency in production
Increased food supplies supported urbanization during the industrial revolution
Agriculture led to greater inequality
Village society was oriented toward stability and security; common access to pasture and woodlands
New law allowed the English gentry to accumulate larger landholdings; allowing them to enclose common lands as private property
Food security matter less than productivity and profitable crops sales
Rural families could no longer sustain themselves; they drift to cities and coal mines for employment
"One person's improvement, therefore, could be another's ticket to unemployment."
Interests of the gentry was well represented in the Parliament and in the courts, those of the poor were not.
Joseph Banks advocated for improvement on the imperial stage
Globalizing the practical application of science through his advocacy of economic botany
Developed a experimental facility at Kew Gardens
Scientists brought new plant specimens from around the world to be examined, catalogued, and cultivated
Biological diffusion
British Navy needed secure supplies of timber, English botanists identified South Asian mahogany as a supplement to British and North American oak
Use of science to justify the dominance of the British elite at home and abroad
Believed that they would ultimately benefit from scientifically rational agriculture.
British colonization in Ireland
Claimed that the Irish were not using land efficiently, legally seized to make it more civil.
Australia
Regarded as empty land because its aboriginal inhabitants had not improved it
Justified their empire by claiming it created the best possible life for locals