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Francis Bacon and Magnetical Cosmology
- Source :
- Isis. 107:707-721
- Publication Year :
- 2016
- Publisher :
- University of Chicago Press, 2016.
-
Abstract
- A short-lived but important movement in seventeenth-century English natural philosophy—which scholars call “magnetical philosophy” or “magnetical cosmology”—sought to understand gravity (both terrestrial and celestial) by analogy with magnetism. The movement was clearly inspired by William Gilbert’s De magnete (1600) and culminated with Robert Hooke’s prefiguring of the universal principle of gravitation, which he personally communicated to Isaac Newton in 1679. But the magnetical cosmology, as professed by those in the movement, differed from Gilbert’s philosophy in highly significant ways. Proponents never accepted Gilbert’s animistic account of magnets and seem tacitly to have accepted a belief in action at a distance that Gilbert himself rejected. This essay argues that Francis Bacon (1561–1626) had already provided just the adaptations to Gilbert’s philosophy that the later thinkers adopted, including an important endorsement of action at a distance, and that he should be recognized as playing an important role in the movement.
- Subjects :
- Male
History
Extraterrestrial Environment
Movement (music)
Physics
Philosophy
Analogy
Historical Article
Biography
Universal law
Cosmology
Epistemology
History, 17th Century
Action at a distance
Magnetic Fields
History and Philosophy of Science
Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)
Humans
Natural (music)
Philosophy, Medical
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15456994 and 00211753
- Volume :
- 107
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Isis
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....05b5c554a57ed481f992f82c24f86ee5