The Invention of Science
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We live in a world made by science. How and when did this happen?
This book tells the story of the extraordinary intellectual and
cultural revolution that gave birth to modern science, and mounts a
major challenge to the prevailing orthodoxy of its history. Before
1492 it was assumed that all significant knowledge was already
available, there was no concept of progress, people looked for
understanding to the past not the future.This book argues that the
discovery of America demonstrated that new knowledge was possible:
indeed it introduced the very concept of 'discovery', and opened
the way to the invention of science. The first crucial discovery
was Tycho Brahe's nova of 1572: proof that there could be change in
the heavens. The telescope (1610) rendered the old astronomy
obsolete.Torricelli's experiment with the vacuum (1643) led
directly to the triumph of the experimental method in the Royal
Society of Boyle and Newton. By 1750 Newtonianism was being
celebrated throughout Europe. The new science did not consist
simply of new discoveries, or new methods.It relied on a new
understanding of what knowledge might be, and with this came a new
language: discovery, progress, facts, experiments, hypotheses,
theories, laws of nature - almost all these terms existed before
1492, but their meanings were radically transformed so they became
tools with which to think scientifically. We all now speak this
language of science, which was invented during the Scientific
Revolution. The new culture had its martyrs (Bruno, Galileo), its
heroes (Kepler, Boyle), its propagandists (Voltaire, Diderot), and
its patient labourers (Gilbert, Hooke).It led to a new rationalism,
killing off alchemy, astrology, and belief in witchcraft. It led to
the invention of the steam engine and to the first Industrial
Revolution. David Wootton's landmark book changes our understanding
of how this great transformation came about, and of what science
is.