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  1. Locke, Bacon and Natural History.Peter R. Anstey - 2002 - Early Science and Medicine 7 (1):65-92.
    This paper argues that the construction of natural histories, as advocated by Francis Bacon, played a central role in John Locke's conception of method in natural philosophy. It presents new evidence in support of John Yolton's claim that "the emphasis upon compiling natural histories of bodies ... was the chief aspect of the Royal Society's programme that attracted Locke, and from which we need to understand his science of nature". Locke's exposure to the natural philosophy of Robert Boyle, the medical (...)
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  • Weighing Experience: Experimental Histories and Francis Bacon's Quantitative Program.Cesare Pastorino - 2011 - Early Science and Medicine 16 (6):542-570.
    Weighing of experience was a central concern of what Bacon called the “literate” stage of experimentation. As early as 1608, Bacon devised precise tenets for standard, quantitative reporting of experiments. These ideas were later integrated into his experimental histories proper. Bacon’s enquiry of dense and rare is the best example of experientia literata developed in a quantitative fashion. I suggest that Bacon’s ideas on this issue can be tied to experiments for the determination of specific gravities born in a monetary (...)
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  • Giovan Battista Della Porta's construction of pneumatic phenomena and his use of recipes as heuristic tools.Arianna Borrelli - 2020 - Centaurus 62 (3):406-424.
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  • (1 other version)Francis Bacon. Discovery and the Art of Discourse.Lisa Jardine - 1975 - Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 37 (3):536-536.
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  • (1 other version)Francis Bacon: Discovery and the Art of Discourse.Lisa Jardine - 1978 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 11 (3):195-197.
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  • Robert Boyle and the early Royal Society: a reciprocal exchange in the making of Baconian science.Michael Hunter - 2007 - British Journal for the History of Science 40 (1):1-23.
    This paper documents an important development in Robert Boyle's natural-philosophical method – his use from the 1660s onwards of ‘heads’ and ‘inquiries’ as a means of organizing his data, setting himself an agenda when studying a subject and soliciting information from others. Boyle acknowledged that he derived this approach from Francis Bacon, but he had not previously used it in his work, and the reason why it came to the fore when it did is not apparent from his printed and (...)
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  • The Mine and the Furnace: Francis Bacon, Thomas Russell, and Early Stuart Mining Culture.Cesare Pastorino - 2009 - Early Science and Medicine 14 (6):630-660.
    "Notwithstanding Francis Bacon’s praise for the philosophical role of the mechanical arts, historians have often downplayed Bacon’s connections with actual artisans and entrepreneurs. Addressing the specific context of mining culture, this study proposes a rather different picture. The analysis of a famous mining metaphor in _The Advancement of Learning_ shows us how Bacon’s project of reform of knowledge could find an apt correspondence in civic and entrepreneurial values of his time. Also, Bacon had interesting and so far unexplored links with (...)
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  • Openness, Secrecy, Authorship. Technical Arts and the Culture of Knowledge from Antiquity to the Renaissance.Pamela O. Long - 2003 - Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 65 (4):766-767.
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  • “Making Trials” in Sixteenth- and Early Seventeenth-Century European Academic Medicine.Evan R. Ragland - 2017 - Isis 108 (3):503-528.
    Throughout the sixteenth century, learned physicians across Europe performed a diverse array of “trials” of phenomena and published reports about them. This essay traces the phrase “periculum facere” (“to make a trial”) and related terms through natural history investigations, drug testing, chymical analysis, and anatomical discoveries. Physicians used ancient precedents, their learned expertise, and pedagogical authority to anchor the epistemic status of their trials and incorporated the historical narratives of their trial-making within arguments to factual and causal knowledge, even philosophical (...)
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  • The Philosopher and the Craftsman: Francis Bacon’s Notion of Experiment and Its Debt to Early Stuart Inventors.Cesare Pastorino - 2017 - Isis 108 (4):749-768.
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