How scientific discoveries and practice were integrated into
nineteenth-century French culture and thought.
Winner of the Sarton Medal for Lifetime Scholarly Achievement of the
History of Science Society
There has been a tendency to view science in nineteenth-century France
as the exclusive territory of the nation's leading academic centers and
the powerful Paris-based administrators who controlled them. Ministries
and the great savants and institutions of the capital seem to have
defined the field, while historians have ignored or glossed over
traditions on the periphery of science. In The Savant and the State,
Robert Fox charts new historiographical territory by synthesizing the
practices and thought of state-sanctioned scientists and those of
independent communities of savants and commentators with very different
political, religious, and cultural priorities.
Fox provides a comprehensive history of the public face of French
science from the Bourbon Restoration to the outbreak of the Great War.
Following the Enlightenment, many different interests competed to define
the role of science and technology in French society. Political and
religious conservatives tended to blame the scientific community for
upsetting traditional values and, implicitly, delivering France into the
hands of revolutionary extremists and Napoleonic bureaucrats.
Scientists, for their part, embraced the belief that observation and
experimentation offered the surest way to the knowledge and wisdom on
which the welfare of society depended. This debate, Fox argues, became a
contest for the hearts and minds of the French citizenry.