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386d Bacon, Francis. (1561-1626) The Essayes, Or Counsels, Civill
and Morall, Of Sir Francis Bacon, Lo[rd] Verulam, Viscount St. Alban.
Newly enlarged.
London: John Haviland, and are sold by R. Allot, 1629
$4,500
Quarto, 5.1 x 7.1 in. Reprint of the 1625 edition. A4 (A1 blank and
wanting), B-Z4, Aa-Uu4, Xx2, a2. This copy lacks leaves Yy-Ccc4: The
Colours of Good and Evil. Bound in full contemporary calf that has
been rebacked, this copy is in good condition with a small repair to
a section of the title page. An early owner, John Bacchus, has left
his ownership inscription in a number of places in this copy.
“[Bacon’s] Essays, the fruits of his political and social observations,
were first published in 1597, enlarged in 1612, and again in 1625. His long
attempt to reform the intellectual habits of the European mind began with the
publication of the Advancement of Learning in 1605, which attacked the unprofitable
scholasticism that inhibited the growth of knowledge and the mental prejudices
that helped to keep men in ignorance. Above all he deplored the poor and confused
state of knowledge about the operations of the natural world. Novum Organum,
begun about 1608, published 1620, called for a systematic study of the natural
world and of the causes of things, and proposed the inductive method as the
most reliable instruments of enquiry. Bacon worked out the principles of the
experimental method in this book, and developed them in De Augmentis, 1623.
Sylva Sylvarum, a proposal of 1,000 experiments to be undertaken, was published
posthumously in 1627, together with New Atlantis, a Utopian fragment written
about 1617 that urged the foundation of a college for scientific research.
A short book that enjoyed much popularity in his lifetime was De Sapientia
Veterum, 1609 (translated as The Wisdom of the Ancients, 1619), which tried
to demonstrate that the myths of the Greeks were coded accounts of their knowledge
of the physical world.” (Perry)
STC 1149; Gibson 15.
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