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  1. John Dee: the patronage of a natural philosopher in Tudor England.Stephen Pumfrey - 2012 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 43 (3):449-459.
    For all of his failures to secure patronage, John Dee was successful compared with his contemporaries. We know more about his patronage relations than those of any other natural philosopher in Tudor England. Only by comparing him with other English client practitioners can we understand how unusual and even productive were Dee’s relations with his patrons. This article makes those comparisons and offers an overview of Dee’s patronage, but in the main it explores three of the unusual aspects.The first is (...)
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  • Francis Bacon and the Institutions for the Promotion of Knowledge and Innovation.Cesare Pastorino - 2013 - Journal of Early Modern Studies 2 (1):9-32.
    This paper analyzes Francis Bacon’s observations on institutions for the advancement of knowledge and technical innovation. Early references to establishments for the promotion of knowledge can be found initial in Bacon’s early works, in the 1590s. Bacon’s journey to France in the second half of the1570s played a role in shaping these early conceptions. In particular, Bacon was likely acquainted with Jaques Gohory’s Lycium philosophal and Nicholas Houel’s Maison de Charité Chrétienne. In the period following the composition of The Advancement (...)
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