
VALERIUS TERMINUS OF THE INTERPRETATION OF NATURE - By Francis Bacon
Preface by Robert Leslie Ellis
VALERIUS TERMINUS OF THE INTERPRETATION OF NATURE
CHAPTER 1. — OF THE LIMITS AND END OF KNOWLEDGE.
CHAPTER 4.
CHAPTER 7. — THAT THE PRETENDED SUCCESSION OF WITS HATH BEEN EVIL PLACED, FOR ASMUCH AS AFTER VARIETY OF SECTS AND OPINIONS, THE MOST POPULAR AND NOT THE TRUEST PREVAILETH AND WEARETH OUT THE REST; BEING THE 7TH CHAPTER; A FRAGMENT.
CHAPTER 8. — OF THE IMPEDIMENTS OF KNOWLEDGE IN HANDLING IT BY PARTS, AND IN SLIPPING OFF PARTICULAR SCIENCES FROM THE ROOT AND STOCK OF UNIVERSAL KNOWLEDGE, BEING THE 8TH CHAPTER, THE WHOLE CHAPTER.
CHAPTER 9. — THAT THE END AND SCOPE OF KNOWLEDGE HATH BEEN GENERALLY MISTAKEN, AND THAT MEN WERE NEVER WELL ADVISED WHAT IT WAS THEY SOUGHT; BEING THE 9TH CHAPTER, WHEREOF A FRAGMENT (WHICH IS THE END OF THE SAME CHAPTER) IS BEFORE.
CHAPTER 10. — THE INVENTORY, OR AN ENUMERATION AND VIEW OF INVENTIONS ALREADY DISCOVERED AND IN USE, TOGETHER WITH A NOTE OF THE WANTS AND THE NATURE OF THE SUPPLIES, BEING THE 10TH CHAPTER; AND THIS A SMALL FRAGMENT THEREOF, BEING THE PREFACE TO THE INVENTORY.
CHAPTER 11. — THE CHAPTER IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWING THE INVENTORY; BEING THE 11TH IN ORDER; A PART THEREOF.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (104K characters)
Release date
2002-06-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1561–1626
A sharp-eyed essayist, lawyer, and royal statesman, this writer helped shape the way later generations thought about knowledge, observation, and discovery. His work links the world of Renaissance politics with the early rise of modern scientific thinking.
View all books