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Matthew Jones

Seattle Pacific University
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  • Seattle Pacific University
    Undergraduate
Seattle, Washington, United States of America
  • All publications (3)
  •  137
    Rhodri Lewis. Language, Mind, and Nature: Artificial Languages in England from Bacon to Locke. xvi + 262 pp., illus., bibl., index. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press, 2007. $90 (review)
    Isis 100 (1): 159-160. 2009.
    Locke: Philosophy of MindLocke: Philosophy of Language, MiscFrancis BaconHistory of Science, Misc
  •  148
    Matters of fact
    Modern Intellectual History 7 (3): 629-642. 2010.
    At the end of Matters of Exchange , Harold Cook's major revisionist account of the early modern scientific revolution, he locates the political and economic writings of Bernard Mandeville within the practices and values of contemporaneous Dutch observational medicine. Like Mandeville, Cook describes the potency of early modern capitalism and its attendant value system in generating industry and knowledge; like Mandeville, Cook finds coercive systems of moral regulation to be mistaken in their es…Read more
    At the end of Matters of Exchange , Harold Cook's major revisionist account of the early modern scientific revolution, he locates the political and economic writings of Bernard Mandeville within the practices and values of contemporaneous Dutch observational medicine. Like Mandeville, Cook describes the potency of early modern capitalism and its attendant value system in generating industry and knowledge; like Mandeville, Cook finds coercive systems of moral regulation to be mistaken in their estimation of human capacities; and like Mandeville, Cook does not shy away from the violence that often made the worldwide commerce in matters of fact possible. “Every Part was full of Vice,” famously rhymed Mandeville, “Yet the whole Mass a Paradise.” The practices and values of science, this book suggests, stemmed from the vices of the merchant and the consumer, not the sprezzatura of the baroque courtier, the asceticism of the Christian gentleman, the speculation of the university philosopher, or the dour appraisal of the theologian. Interest, not claims to disinterest, made modern science and its attendant values possible. Scrupulous attention to goods from around the world and right at home created the conditions for natural knowledge
    17th/18th Century British PhilosophyBernard Mandeville
  •  117
    Barbara J. Shapiro. A Culture of Fact: England, 1550–1720. xii+284 pp., index. Ithaca, N.Y./London: Cornell University Press, 2000. $42.50
    Isis 94 (4): 712-713. 2003.
    History of Science
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