Wonders and the Order of Nature is about the ways in which European
naturalists from the High Middle Ages through the Enlightenment used
wonder and wonders, the passion and its objects, to envision themselves
and the natural world. Monsters, gems that shone in the dark, petrifying
springs, celestial apparitions -- these were the marvels that adorned
romances, puzzled philosophers, lured collectors, and frightened the
devout.
Drawing on the histories of art, science, philosophy, and literature,
Lorraine Daston and Katharine Park explore and explain how wonder and
wonders fortified princely power, rewove the texture of scientific
experience, and shaped the sensibility of intellectuals. This is a
history of the passions of inquiry, of how wonder sometimes inflamed,
sometimes dampened curiosity about nature's best-kept secrets. Refracted
through the prism of wonders, the order of nature splinters into a
spectrum of orders, a tour of possible worlds.