This paper shows how Bacon is on the one hand still anchored to the idea of contingency as an intrinsic and ontological trait of natural phenomena, though he provides a signifcatively different explanation than the one of Scholastic-Aristotelianism and, on the other, how his focus on the notion of “pretergeneration” (i.e., nature’s spontaneous generation of monsters and errors), functional to his philosophical agenda, aimed at mastering nature through art, represents a strong detachment from the Aristotelian idea that science only concerns phenomena happening necessarily for the most part. Pretergeneration, this paper shows, is understood by Bacon as a result of the Fall. For Bacon, matter, as well as humans, started to behave in such a way...
In the annals of both philosophy and science, Francis Bacon is usually portrayed as one of the most ...
This paper investigates some examples of Baconian experimentation, coming from Bacon’s ‘scientific’ ...
The "interpretation of nature" (interpretatio naturae) is the leading idea in Francis Bacon's natura...
This paper shows how Bacon is on the one hand still anchored to the idea of contingency as an intrin...
This thesis seeks to explain how Francis Bacon promoted a materialist ontology whilst at the same ti...
This study focuses on Roger Bacon’s thought on chance in nature according to his early Questiones su...
Francis Bacon shared with many vitalists a belief in the radiative nature of bodies. Bacon’s bodies ...
Bacon’s universe is one in which matter is constantly striving to satisfy its appetites. Bodies have...
This article argues that for Francis Bacon there is only one type of spiritual matter, which acquire...
Francis Bacon (1561-1626) wrote that good scientists are not like ants (mindlessly gathering data) o...
Francis Bacon is one of the architects of the modern conception of scientific method. Yet Bacon's co...
1. Bacon's ambition was to reconstitute man's knowledge of nature in order to apply it to the relief...
The philosophy of Francis Bacon was interpreted in various ways in the seventeenth century. In Engla...
In this paper, I explain Francis Bacon's use of plants as philosophical instruments in the context o...
Bacon’s ideas on motion rested on an appetitive and acquisitive consideration of life in which natur...
In the annals of both philosophy and science, Francis Bacon is usually portrayed as one of the most ...
This paper investigates some examples of Baconian experimentation, coming from Bacon’s ‘scientific’ ...
The "interpretation of nature" (interpretatio naturae) is the leading idea in Francis Bacon's natura...
This paper shows how Bacon is on the one hand still anchored to the idea of contingency as an intrin...
This thesis seeks to explain how Francis Bacon promoted a materialist ontology whilst at the same ti...
This study focuses on Roger Bacon’s thought on chance in nature according to his early Questiones su...
Francis Bacon shared with many vitalists a belief in the radiative nature of bodies. Bacon’s bodies ...
Bacon’s universe is one in which matter is constantly striving to satisfy its appetites. Bodies have...
This article argues that for Francis Bacon there is only one type of spiritual matter, which acquire...
Francis Bacon (1561-1626) wrote that good scientists are not like ants (mindlessly gathering data) o...
Francis Bacon is one of the architects of the modern conception of scientific method. Yet Bacon's co...
1. Bacon's ambition was to reconstitute man's knowledge of nature in order to apply it to the relief...
The philosophy of Francis Bacon was interpreted in various ways in the seventeenth century. In Engla...
In this paper, I explain Francis Bacon's use of plants as philosophical instruments in the context o...
Bacon’s ideas on motion rested on an appetitive and acquisitive consideration of life in which natur...
In the annals of both philosophy and science, Francis Bacon is usually portrayed as one of the most ...
This paper investigates some examples of Baconian experimentation, coming from Bacon’s ‘scientific’ ...
The "interpretation of nature" (interpretatio naturae) is the leading idea in Francis Bacon's natura...