Fr. 56.90

Science as Child's Play in Seventeenth-Century England - Innocence, Experience, Experiment

Inglese · Copertina rigida

Spedizione di solito entro 6 a 7 settimane

Descrizione

Ulteriori informazioni

In recent decades, scholars have uncovered the vital contributions made by non-elite figures, including women, artisans, and indigenous peoples, to the development of early modern natural philosophy. This Palgrave Pivot argues that children, too, quite literally played a decisive role in seventeenth-century experimental science in England, both as rhetorical exemplars, and as active contributors in the generation of natural knowledge. Exploring a widespread but critically-neglected connection between experiment and child's play, it both illuminates the extent to which children participated - intentionally or incidentally - in natural historical and experimental activities, and investigates how ideas about childish innocence and sensory receptivity informed the nascent ideology of scientific objectivity. In the work of figures associated with the early Royal Society, this book proposes, children emerge as instinctive empiricists and experimenters, setting in motion a broader cultural transformation in ideas about childhood and education which still shapes how we think about these things today.

Sommario

1. Introduction: 'No babes, but strong men'?.- 2. 'Flesh most fluid': Children's Senses.- 3. 'Too young to be dogmaticall': Innocence and Objectivity.- 4. Nature's A.B.C. and the 'Toyish Art' of the Microscope.- 5. Bubbles, Popguns, Lizard's Tails: Play as Experiment.- 6. 'A compendious way to Experience: Innocence Regained'.- 7. Conclusion.

Info autore

Elizabeth L. Swann is Assistant Professor of Interdisciplinary Literary Studies at Durham University, UK.

Riassunto

In recent decades, scholars have uncovered the vital contributions made by non-elite figures, including women, artisans, and indigenous peoples, to the development of early modern natural philosophy. This Palgrave Pivot argues that children, too, quite literally played a decisive role in seventeenth-century experimental science in England, both as rhetorical exemplars, and as active contributors in the generation of natural knowledge. Exploring a widespread but critically-neglected connection between experiment and child’s play, it both illuminates the extent to which children participated – intentionally or incidentally – in natural historical and experimental activities, and investigates how ideas about childish innocence and sensory receptivity informed the nascent ideology of scientific objectivity. In the work of figures associated with the early Royal Society, this book proposes, children emerge as instinctive empiricists and experimenters, setting in motion a broader cultural transformation in ideas about childhood and education which still shapes how we think about these things today.

Dettagli sul prodotto

Autori Elizabeth L Swann, Elizabeth L. Swann
Editore Springer, Berlin
 
Lingue Inglese
Formato Copertina rigida
Pubblicazione 22.01.2025
 
EAN 9783031758485
ISBN 978-3-0-3175848-5
Pagine 144
Dimensioni 148 mm x 12 mm x 210 mm
Peso 305 g
Illustrazioni XIII, 144 p. 7 illus.
Categorie Scienze naturali, medicina, informatica, tecnica > Scienze naturali, tematiche generali
Scienze umane, arte, musica > Storia > Storia dei paesi e delle regioni

Renaissance, Geschichte der Naturwissenschaften, Westeuropa, History of Science, History of Britain and Ireland, History of Early Modern Europe, ca. 1500 bis zur Gegenwart, natural philosophy, history of childhood, early science, History of Experience

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