The Reputation and Influence of Francis Bacon in the Seventeenth CenturyColumbia University, 1934 - 225 pages |
Contents
BACONS RELATION TO THE ROYAL SOCIETY | 41 |
BACONS RECEPTION IN EUROPE IN THE SEV | 77 |
BACON DESCARTES AND THE CARTESIANS | 117 |
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Académie Académie des Sciences Advancement of Learning appear Aristotle Augmentis axioms Bacon and Descartes Bacon's reputation Bacon's writings Baconian Baconian method Bayle believed Bishop Sprat Boerhaave Boyle Cartesian chapter Comenius concerning conclusion considered criticism Descartes Discours doctrine edit empiricism England English Essays evidence experiment experimental method expressed fact final causes France Francis Bacon French Galileo Gassendi Hobbes Holland human Huygens hypothesis Ibid ideas inductive method influence interest knowledge later Leibniz letter Locke logic London Lord Bacon Lord Chancellor Lord Verulam Malebranche mathematics matter ment mentioned Mersenne metaphysics mind modern Musschenbroek natural history natural philosophy never Newton Newton's method Newtonian Novum Organum observation Oeuvres op.cit opinion Opticks Oxford Paris particular phenomena physics practical precepts principles procedure published Quoted reason recognized Robert Boyle Royal Society says scholasticism scientific scientists seems seventeenth century sGravesande Sortais statement Tenison things thought tion trans true truth Verulamius Vico wrote