It is a commonplace that science fiction draws inspiration from science fact. It is a less familiar thought-though still widely acknowledged-that science has sometimes drawn its inspiration from science fiction. (Arthur C. Clarke’s idea of geostationary communications satellites is a well-known example.) However, the debt of science to science fiction extends beyond such specific examples of scientific and technological innovations. This essay explores the paradoxical-sounding thesis that science itself, as we now know it, was originally the product of a science fiction vision. At a time when the collective endeavours of early modern researchers amounted to something less than science, Francis Bacon’s New Atlantis (1627) helped show what wo...
Francis Bacon (1561-1626) wrote that good scientists are not like ants (mindlessly gathering data) o...
This study investigates the role of authority in the works of Francis Bacon, arguing that the issue ...
Increasingly, attention is being given to the religious underpinnings of Francis Bacon's project to ...
It is a commonplace that science fiction draws inspiration from science fact. It is a less familiar...
Peter Lucas Published Online: 2018-07-18 | DOI: https://doi.org/10.1515/culture-2018-0011 ...
Because it is a fiction drawing upon the Utopian genre, the New Atlantis is one of Bacon’s most orig...
UK Francis Bacon’s utopian fragment New Atlantis was originally prized by its 17th-century readers f...
The New Atlantis has fired the imaginations of its readers since its original appearance in 1627. Of...
Is language – well beyond formulas and equations – important to science? This book dwells on the rol...
The legend of the sunken city of Atlantis has inspired Francis Bacon this utopian novel. Written in ...
The article interprets New Atlantis by Francis Bacon and reads it as a hypertext of Instauratio Magn...
Is language - well beyond formulas and equations - important to science? This book dwells on the rol...
The paper examines two visions of the relation between science and society through the utopian novel...
1. Bacon's ambition was to reconstitute man's knowledge of nature in order to apply it to the relief...
TO THE READER by Bacon's secretary William Rawley when he published New Atlantis after Bacon's death...
Francis Bacon (1561-1626) wrote that good scientists are not like ants (mindlessly gathering data) o...
This study investigates the role of authority in the works of Francis Bacon, arguing that the issue ...
Increasingly, attention is being given to the religious underpinnings of Francis Bacon's project to ...
It is a commonplace that science fiction draws inspiration from science fact. It is a less familiar...
Peter Lucas Published Online: 2018-07-18 | DOI: https://doi.org/10.1515/culture-2018-0011 ...
Because it is a fiction drawing upon the Utopian genre, the New Atlantis is one of Bacon’s most orig...
UK Francis Bacon’s utopian fragment New Atlantis was originally prized by its 17th-century readers f...
The New Atlantis has fired the imaginations of its readers since its original appearance in 1627. Of...
Is language – well beyond formulas and equations – important to science? This book dwells on the rol...
The legend of the sunken city of Atlantis has inspired Francis Bacon this utopian novel. Written in ...
The article interprets New Atlantis by Francis Bacon and reads it as a hypertext of Instauratio Magn...
Is language - well beyond formulas and equations - important to science? This book dwells on the rol...
The paper examines two visions of the relation between science and society through the utopian novel...
1. Bacon's ambition was to reconstitute man's knowledge of nature in order to apply it to the relief...
TO THE READER by Bacon's secretary William Rawley when he published New Atlantis after Bacon's death...
Francis Bacon (1561-1626) wrote that good scientists are not like ants (mindlessly gathering data) o...
This study investigates the role of authority in the works of Francis Bacon, arguing that the issue ...
Increasingly, attention is being given to the religious underpinnings of Francis Bacon's project to ...