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Newtonianism for the ladies and other uneducated souls

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  • 181 Seiten
  • 7 Lesestunden

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In the course of the eighteenth century, lay people came to see science as an authority beyond criticism. The cultural status that science acquired continued for centuries and, even though it has been challenged in our times, science is still one of our main sources of meaning. In spite of universalist claims, eighteenth-century philosophers and popularizers did not grant women-traditionally the emblem of the uneducated-access to the sanctuary of science. Rather, the popularization of science functioned as an effective means for preaching the Enlightenment gospel to an educated laity. Popular science works are fragments in the composition of a new human and social ideal, in which science plays a crucial part. They are key building blocks in the construction of a learned worldview shaped by Enlightenment ideals, tensions, and contradictions.

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Newtonianism for the ladies and other uneducated souls, Moira R. Rogers

Sprache
Erscheinungsdatum
2003
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Titel
Newtonianism for the ladies and other uneducated souls
Sprache
Englisch
Autor*innen
Moira R. Rogers
Verlag
Lang
Erscheinungsdatum
2003
Einband
Hardcover
Seitenzahl
181
ISBN10
0820450294
ISBN13
9780820450292
Reihe
Beschreibung
In the course of the eighteenth century, lay people came to see science as an authority beyond criticism. The cultural status that science acquired continued for centuries and, even though it has been challenged in our times, science is still one of our main sources of meaning. In spite of universalist claims, eighteenth-century philosophers and popularizers did not grant women-traditionally the emblem of the uneducated-access to the sanctuary of science. Rather, the popularization of science functioned as an effective means for preaching the Enlightenment gospel to an educated laity. Popular science works are fragments in the composition of a new human and social ideal, in which science plays a crucial part. They are key building blocks in the construction of a learned worldview shaped by Enlightenment ideals, tensions, and contradictions.