Notwithstanding Francis Bacon's praise for the philosophical role of the mechanical arts, historians have often downplayed Bacon's connections with actual artisans and entrepreneurs. Addressing the specific context of mining culture, this study proposes a rather different picture. The analysis of a famous mining metaphor in The Advancement of Learning shows us how Bacon's project of reform of knowledge could find an apt correspondence in civic and entrepreneurial values of his time. Also, Bacon had interesting and so far unexplored links with the early modern English mining enterprises, like the Company of Mineral and Battery Works, of which he was a shareholder. Moreover, Bacon's notes in a private notebook, Commentarius Solutus, and recor...
Free mining or customary mining laws were known in certain lead mining areas of England and Wales, i...
The involvement of British academic scientists in commercial work has been often discussed by histor...
William Logan was recently voted Canada's most important scientist. But the origin of his scientific...
This is a study of the links between Francis Bacon and the technical experimenters and projectors of...
In the inaugural issue of Past and Present, Eric Hobsbawm emphasised the complexity of workers' and ...
This thesis explores the relationship between household and community ties and the process of indust...
This thesis traces the development of the copper industry, mining and smelting, located mainly in Co...
This article examines the perception and valuation of mineral resources in sixteenth and seventeenth...
The parallels between Bacon\u27s career and that of Edward H. Cooper are, of course, obvious. Bacon ...
The tin and copper industries of Dartmoor in Devonshire are investigated through an analysis of the ...
In 1889, the eminent British scientist and Aluminium Company director Sir Henry Roscoe gave an addre...
This special issue is dedicated to the cultural values and impacts of the early modern mining indust...
Francis Bacon, who lived in the age of "the Scientific Revolution" said, "Human knowledge and human ...
1. Bacon's ambition was to reconstitute man's knowledge of nature in order to apply it to the relief...
In 1838 the second Marquis of Breadalbane, having failed to lease the mineral rights at Tyndrum lead...
Free mining or customary mining laws were known in certain lead mining areas of England and Wales, i...
The involvement of British academic scientists in commercial work has been often discussed by histor...
William Logan was recently voted Canada's most important scientist. But the origin of his scientific...
This is a study of the links between Francis Bacon and the technical experimenters and projectors of...
In the inaugural issue of Past and Present, Eric Hobsbawm emphasised the complexity of workers' and ...
This thesis explores the relationship between household and community ties and the process of indust...
This thesis traces the development of the copper industry, mining and smelting, located mainly in Co...
This article examines the perception and valuation of mineral resources in sixteenth and seventeenth...
The parallels between Bacon\u27s career and that of Edward H. Cooper are, of course, obvious. Bacon ...
The tin and copper industries of Dartmoor in Devonshire are investigated through an analysis of the ...
In 1889, the eminent British scientist and Aluminium Company director Sir Henry Roscoe gave an addre...
This special issue is dedicated to the cultural values and impacts of the early modern mining indust...
Francis Bacon, who lived in the age of "the Scientific Revolution" said, "Human knowledge and human ...
1. Bacon's ambition was to reconstitute man's knowledge of nature in order to apply it to the relief...
In 1838 the second Marquis of Breadalbane, having failed to lease the mineral rights at Tyndrum lead...
Free mining or customary mining laws were known in certain lead mining areas of England and Wales, i...
The involvement of British academic scientists in commercial work has been often discussed by histor...
William Logan was recently voted Canada's most important scientist. But the origin of his scientific...