17世紀イングランドにおける科学的探究の詩学<br>The Poetics of Scientific Investigation in Seventeenth-Century England

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17世紀イングランドにおける科学的探究の詩学
The Poetics of Scientific Investigation in Seventeenth-Century England

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  • 製本 Hardcover:ハードカバー版/ページ数 310 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9780198704805
  • DDC分類 820.936

Full Description

The writing of science in the period 1580-1700 is artfully, diffidently, carelessly, boldly, and above all self-consciously literary. The Poetics of Scientific Investigation in Seventeenth-Century English Literature considers the literary textures of science writing -- its rhetorical figures, neologisms, its uses of parody, romance, and various kinds of verse. The experimental and social practices of science are examined through literary representations of the laboratory, of collaborative retirement, of virtual, epistolary conversation, and of an imagined paradise of investigative fellowship and learning. Claire Preston argues that the rhetorical, generic, and formal qualities of scientific writing are also the intellectual processes of early-modern science itself. How was science to be written in this period? That question, which piqued natural philosophers who were searching for apt conventions of scientific language and report, was initially resolved by the humanist rhetorical and generic skills in which they were already highly trained. At the same time non-scientific writers, enthralled by the developments of science, were quick to deploy ideas and images from astronomy, optics, chemistry, biology, and medical practices. Practising scientists and inspired laymen or quasi-scientists produced new, adjusted, or hybrid literary forms, often collapsing the distinction between the factual and the imaginative, between the rhetorically ornate and the plain. Early-modern science and its literary vehicles are frequently indistinguishable, scientific practice and scientific expression mutually involved. Among the major writers discussed are Montaigne, Bacon, Donne, Browne, Lovelace, Boyle, Sprat, Oldenburg, Evelyn, Cowley, and Dryden.

Contents

Introduction 'A distemper of learning': the languages of science ; 1. Orlando Curioso: the lapsarian style of Thomas Browne ; 2. Equivocal Boyle and the enamelled telescope ; 3. 'A blessing in the wilderness': the place of science ; 4. Dining Out in the Republic of Letters: the rhetoric of scientific correspondence ; 5. The Counsel of Herbs: scientific georgic ; Bibliography

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