The Kingdom of Science: Literary Utopianism and British Education, 1612-1870University of Nebraska Press, 2002 - 375 Seiten The Kingdom of Science examines Baconian utopias as blueprints for a scientific sociology of knowledge that founded a new social and economic world in the seventeenth century. Looking backward, Paul A. Olson begins with More's Utopia and Shakespeare's The Tempest, static state utopias designed to woo us toward a moral as opposed to a scientific reform. To these, Olson then contrasts the primary subjects of his study--Bacon's New Atlantis, the Commonwealth educational utopias, and the utopianism of Adam Smith and his Utilitarian followers. These later utopias increasingly point to an ideal world to be dominated by a science linked to technology, compelled education, and competitive capitalism. They posit as their end the conquest of nature and use as their means the routinizing of research and education. Their visions, Olson argues, lie at the center of the educational models adopted by mainstream British and American policymakers in the last century and a half--despite the warnings of both conservative and radical critics concerning their potential consequences for the environment and for culture. The challenge Olson presents for those responsible for forging our social future is creating visions sufficient to energize human groups while allowing both for the critical reflection necessary for constructive policy debate and for the action necessary to prevent environmental chaos and cultural disruption. The Kingdom of Science is a companion to Olson's earlier book, The Journey to Wisdom, and carries the assumptions of that patristic-medieval study into the early-modern and modern periods. |
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Seite 130
... Gulliver's mad development are not new to Swift . Talking horses also appear in books 17 and 19 of Homer's Iliad , when Achilles ' horse Xanthus weeps for Patroclus ' death and later predicts Achilles ' death ( bk . 17 , ll . 435 ff ...
... Gulliver's mad development are not new to Swift . Talking horses also appear in books 17 and 19 of Homer's Iliad , when Achilles ' horse Xanthus weeps for Patroclus ' death and later predicts Achilles ' death ( bk . 17 , ll . 435 ff ...
Seite 316
... Gulliver , see Douglas Lane Patey , " Swift's Satire on ' Science ' and the Structure of Gulliver's Travels , " English Literary History 58 ( 1991 ) : 823-27 . Patey argues that Swift's critique of science is directed against scientific ...
... Gulliver , see Douglas Lane Patey , " Swift's Satire on ' Science ' and the Structure of Gulliver's Travels , " English Literary History 58 ( 1991 ) : 823-27 . Patey argues that Swift's critique of science is directed against scientific ...
Seite 319
... Gulliver's Travels , 274 . 137. Swift , Gulliver's Travels , 207. The horses , as perceived by Gulliver , combine the roles of Circe as magician with those of her metamorphosed animals . In his view they are human beings metamorphosed ...
... Gulliver's Travels , 274 . 137. Swift , Gulliver's Travels , 207. The horses , as perceived by Gulliver , combine the roles of Circe as magician with those of her metamorphosed animals . In his view they are human beings metamorphosed ...
Inhalt
Shakespeares Utopian Tempest | 1 |
Education by the Book | 17 |
New Atlantis and the Chiliastic Utopias | 41 |
Urheberrecht | |
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The Kingdom of Science: Literary Utopianism and British Education, 1612-1870 Paul A. Olson Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 2002 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
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