Creating life in the laboratory: Francis Bacon's journey from living spirits to animate bodies
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Published:2024-01-10
Issue:
Volume:
Page:
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ISSN:0035-9149
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Container-title:Notes and Records: the Royal Society Journal of the History of Science
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Notes Rec.
Affiliation:
1. ICUB-Humanities, University of Bucharest, Dimitrie Brandza str. 1, Bucharest, Romania
Abstract
This article aims to reconstruct a complex inquiry into the nature of life delineated in Francis Bacon's ‘last writings’, a series of manuscripts discovered at the end of the twentieth century. I show that these fragmentary texts can be understood if we place them in the larger context of Bacon's posthumous works: the
Sylva Sylvarum
and the
Historia densi et rari
. Taken together, these texts unveil Bacon's last bold project of a
History and inquisition into the nature of animate and inanimate
[
Historia et inquisitio de animato et inanimato
], an investigation focusing on the possibility of creating life in the laboratory. I show that Bacon's last project marks a revaluation of earlier definitions and explanations regarding the nature of life, as well as a change in the vocabulary. I suggest that some of these changes might have originated in practice; and I show how various recipes, observations and experiments recorded in Bacon's late writings can illuminate and justify some of his new terminology.
Funder
Unitatea Executiva pentru Finantarea Invatamantului Superior, a Cercetarii, Dezvoltarii si Inovarii
Publisher
The Royal Society