Empiricism today implies the dispassionate scrutiny of facts. But Jessica Riskin finds that in the French Enlightenment, empiricism was intimately bound up with sensibility. In what she calls a "sentimental empiricism,"...

Buy Now From Amazon

Empiricism today implies the dispassionate scrutiny of facts. But Jessica Riskin finds that in the French Enlightenment, empiricism was intimately bound up with sensibility. In what she calls a "sentimental empiricism," natural knowledge was taken to rest on a blend of experience and emotion.

Riskin argues that sentimental empiricism brought together ideas and institutions, practices and politics. She shows, for instance, how the study of blindness, led by ideas about the mental and moral role of vision and by cataract surgeries, shaped the first school for the blind; how Benjamin Franklin's electrical physics, ascribing desires to nature, engaged French economic reformers; and how the question of the role of language in science and social life linked disputes over Antoine Lavoisier's new chemical names to the founding of France's modern system of civic education.

Recasting the Age of Reason by stressing its conjunction with the Age of Sensibility, Riskin offers an entirely new perspective on the development of modern science and the history of the Enlightenment.


Similar Products

Visions of Science: Books and Readers at the Dawn of the Victorian AgeThe Restless Clock: A History of the Centuries-Long Argument over What Makes Living Things TickGenesis Redux: Essays in the History and Philosophy of Artificial LifeDefenders of the Text: The Traditions of Scholarship in an Age of Science, 1450-1800Revolutionizing the Sciences: European Knowledge and Its Ambitions, 1500-1700, Second EditionThe Intelligibility of Nature: How Science Makes Sense of the World (science.culture)Known and Strange Things: EssaysLeviathan and the Air-Pump: Hobbes, Boyle, and the Experimental Life