Novum organon renovatum Being the second part of the philosophy of the inductive sciences

audiobook

Novum organon renovatum Being the second part of the philosophy of the inductive sciences

by William Whewell

EN·~12 hours·3 chapters

Chapters

3 total

NOVUM ORGANON RENOVATUM.

12:27:37

PREFACE.

14:28

NOVUM ORGANON RENOVATUM.

1:51

Description

This volume revisits the grand project first set out by Francis Bacon, asking whether the machinery of scientific discovery can be reshaped for our modern age. Drawing on three centuries of advances in astronomy, physics, chemistry, natural history and physiology, the author surveys how knowledge has actually been built, searching for common patterns that might guide future inquiry. The opening chapters lay out a critique of Bacon’s original precepts, showing where they succeeded and where they fell short in practice.

The second part turns the historical survey into a set of concrete recommendations for researchers seeking new insights. By analysing the ways invention, sagacity and genius have interacted with method, the work proposes a renewed “organ”—a framework that respects both rigorous observation and the creative leaps essential to discovery. Readers will find a thoughtful blend of philosophy and case studies that illuminates how past breakthroughs can inform present‑day scientific thinking.

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Full title

Novum organon renovatum Being the second part of the philosophy of the inductive sciences Being the second part of the philosophy of the inductive sciences

Language

en

Duration

~12 hours (733K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Original publisher

United Kingdom: John W. Parker & Son, 1858.

Credits

Ed Brandon from materials kindly provided by the Internet Archive, and with help gratefully received from various voluntary sources.

Release date

2023-01-10

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

William Whewell

William Whewell

1794–1866

A brilliant 19th-century thinker who moved easily between science, philosophy, theology, and university life, he is often remembered for helping shape how people talk about science itself. He spent most of his career at Cambridge and became one of the best-known intellectual figures of Victorian Britain.

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