Although the Scientific Revolution has long been regarded as the
beginning of modern science, there has been little consensus about its
true character. While the application of mathematics to the study of the
natural world has always been recognized as an important factor, the
role of experiment has been less clearly understood.
Peter Dear investigates the nature of the change that occurred during
this period, focusing particular attention on evolving notions of
experience and how these developed into the experimental work that is at
the center of modern science. He examines seventeenth-century
mathematical sciences--astronomy, optics, and mechanics--not as abstract
ideas, but as vital enterprises that involved practices related to both
experience and experiment. Dear illuminates how mathematicians and
natural philosophers of the period--Mersenne, Descartes, Pascal, Barrow,
Newton, Boyle, and the Jesuits--used experience in their argumentation,
and how and why these approaches changed over the course of a century.
Drawing on mathematical texts and works of natural philosophy from all
over Europe, he describes a process of change that was gradual, halting,
sometimes contradictory--far from the sharp break with intellectual
tradition implied by the term "revolution."