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The Invisible World: Early Modern Philosophy and the Invention of the Microscope » (REPRINT)

Book cover image of The Invisible World: Early Modern Philosophy and the Invention of the Microscope by Catherine Wilson

Authors: Catherine Wilson
ISBN-13: 9780691017099, ISBN-10: 0691017093
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Date Published: December 1997
Edition: REPRINT

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Author Biography: Catherine Wilson

Book Synopsis

In the seventeenth century the microscope opened up a new world of observation, and, according to Catherine Wilson, profoundly revised the thinking of scientists and philosophers alike. The interior of nature, once closed off to both sympathetic intuition and direct perception, was now accessible with the help of optical instruments. The microscope led to a conception of science as an objective, procedure-driven mode of inquiry and renewed interest in atomism and mechanism. Focusing on the earliest forays into microscopical research, from 1620 to 1720, this book provides us with both a compelling technological history and a lively assessment of the new knowledge that helped launch philosophy into the modern era.Wilson argues that the discovery of the microworld--and the apparent role of living animalcula in generation, contagion, and disease--presented metaphysicians with the task of reconciling the ubiquity of life with human-centered theological systems. It was also a source of problems for philosophers concerned with essences, qualities, and the limits of human knowledge, whose positions are echoed in current debates about realism and instrument-mediated knowledge. Covering the contributions of pioneering microscopists (Leeuwenhoek, Swammerdam, Malpighi, Grew, and Hooke) and the work of philosophers interested in the microworld (Bacon, Descartes, Leibniz, Malebranche, Locke, and Berkeley), she challenges historians who view the abstract sciences as the sole catalyst of the Scientific Revolution as she stresses the importance of observational and experimental science to the modern intellect.

Joseph C. Pitt - Journal of the History of Biology

This is an important work. It breaks new ground, and it forces us to reassess some of our most cherished assumptions about the scientific revolution.

Table of Contents

Preface
1Science and Protoscience3
2The Subtlety of Nature39
3Instruments and Applications70
4Preexistent and Emergent Form103
5Animalcula and the Theory of Animate Contagion140
6The Philosophers and the Microscope176
7The Microscope Superfluous and Uncertain215
8Truths and Appearances251
Bibliography257
Index273

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