
audiobook
This volume offers a sweeping survey of the development of the inductive sciences, tracing their evolution from early natural philosophy to the modern era. The author arranges the material into distinct epochs, each anchored by a landmark discovery, and then follows the surrounding prelude and sequel events that shaped the field. Readers get a clear picture of how observation, experiment, and reasoning progressed across centuries, with vivid portraits of the thinkers who drove change.
Beyond a mere chronology, the work seeks to illuminate the underlying philosophy of scientific discovery, showing how methods of inference and proof have been refined over time. The author's balanced treatment respects contributions from diverse traditions, presenting both celebrated figures and lesser‑known innovators with impartiality. For anyone curious about how the scientific method itself emerged and matured, this narrative provides both depth and accessibility, inviting listeners to explore the roots of modern knowledge.
Language
en
Duration
~47 hours (2759K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
United States: D. Appleton and Company, 1875.
Credits
Ed Brandon
Release date
2022-08-05
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1794–1866
A gifted Victorian thinker who moved easily between science, philosophy, history, and theology, he helped shape how people talk about scientific inquiry itself. He is often remembered for coining important scientific terms and for bringing wide-ranging curiosity to everything he wrote.
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