|
614c Bacon, Francis. (1561-1626) Of The Advancement And Proficiencie
Of Learning: Or The Partitions Of Sciences Nine Books. Written in Latin
by the most Eminent, Illustrious and Famous Lord Francis Bacon Baron
of Verulam, Viscount St. Alban, Counsellour of Estate and Lord Chancellor
of England. Interpreted by Gilbert Wats.
London: for Thomas Williams at the Golden Ball
in Osier-Lane, 1674
$1,100
Folio, 11.5 x 7 in. Second edition. One unsigned
leaf (portrait), [A]-[K]4, [L]2, A-Z4, Aa-Vv4 (final blank and genuine).
The engraved portrait of Bacon is bound opposite the title. This
copy is in good condition, with some minor scattered staining and
tears. It has been recently rebound in full calfskin, antique style.
This is the second complete edition in English of Bacon’s De
Augmentis Scientiarum, which was first printed in Oxford in 1640.
“Partitiones Scientiarum is a survey of the sciences, either such as then
existed or such as required to be constructed afresh—in fact, it can be
seen as an inventory of all the possessions of the human mind. The famous classification
on which this survey proceeds is based upon an analysis of the faculties and
objects of human knowledge. This division is represented by the De Augmentis
Scientiarum [The Advancement of Learning].”
“Bacon’s grand motive in his attempt to found the sciences anew was
the intense conviction that the knowledge man possessed was of little service
to him. ‘The knowledge whereof the world is now possessed, especially that
of nature, extendeth not to magnitude and certainty of works.’ Man’s
sovereignty over nature, which is founded on knowledge alone, had been lost,
and instead of the free relation between things and the human mind, there was
nothing but vain notions and blind experiments. [Bacon held that] philosophy
is not the science of things divine and human; it is not the search after truth. ‘I
find that even those that have sought knowledge for itself, and not for benefit
or ostentation, or any practical enablement in the course of their life, have
nevertheless propounded to themselves a wrong mark, namely, satisfaction (which
men call truth) and not operation.’ Philosophy is altogether practical;
it is of little matter to the fortunes of humanity what abstract notions one
may entertain concerning the nature and the principles of things. This truth,
however, has never yet been recognized; it has not yet been seen that the true
aim of all science is ‘to endow the condition and life of man with new
powers or works,’ or ‘to extend more widely the limits of the power
and greatness of man.’” (EB)
Gibson #142; Wing B-312.
|