Devoir de Philosophie

Bacon, Francis

Publié le 22/02/2012

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bacon
Along with Descartes, Bacon was the most original and most profound of the intellectual reformers of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. He had little respect for the work of his predecessors, which he saw as having been vitiated by a misplaced reverence for authority, and a consequent neglect of experience. Bacon's dream was one of power over nature, based on experiment, embodied in appropriate institutions and used for the amelioration of human life; this could be achieved only if the rational speculations of philosophers were united with the craft-skills employed in the practical arts. The route to success lay in a new method, one based not on deductive logic or mathematics, but on eliminative induction. This method would draw on data extracted from extensive and elaborately constructed natural histories. Unlike the old induction by simple enumeration of the logic textbooks, it would be able to make use of negative as well as positive instances, allowing conclusions to be established with certainty, and thus enabling a firm and lasting structure of knowledge to be built. Bacon never completed his project, and even the account of the new method in theNovum Organum (1620) remained unfinished. His writings nevertheless had an immense influence on later seventeenth-century thinkers, above all in stimulating the belief that natural philosophy ought to be founded on a systematic programme of experiment. Perhaps his most enduring legacy, however, has been the modern concept of technology - the union of rational theory and empirical practice - and its application to human welfare.
bacon

« Elizabeth, who recognized his abilities but seems to have found his personality unappealing.

Burghley was more concerned to advance the career of his own son Robert, later Earl of Salisbury, and Bacon attached himself to Elizabeth 's last favourite, the brilliant but insubstantial Earl of Essex.

Essex's attempt in 1601 to restore his fortunes by staging an insurrection proved a complete fiasco, and made him liable to prosecution for treason. Bacon adroitly changed sides and prosecuted his former patron with a skill and vigour which provided ample confirmation both of his remarkable talents and of a fundamental coldness of character. The accession of James I in 1603 presented the prospect - initially unfulfilled - of professional advancement. Bacon was knighted soon after the King's arrival in London, but he had to wait until 1607 before being given his first important office, that of Solicitor General.

It was only after the death of Salisbury in 1612 that promotion became truly rapid: in 1613 he was appointed Attorney General, in 1617 Lord Keeper, and in 1618 Lord Chancellor.

This last office brought admission to the peerage, first as Baron Verulam (1618) and then as Viscount St Albans (1621). Bacon's fall was precipitous and catastrophic, though not entirely unpredictable.

He had supplemented the income from his office by taking payments from those whose cases he heard, and though this was far from unprecedented it did make him vulnerable to attack.

He was also important enough to be a substantial sacrifice to an angry House of Commons, without being so close to James that he could not be dispensed with.

At the beginning of May 1621 Bacon was deprived of office, imprisoned - albeit for only a few days - in the Tower of London, fined £40,000, barred from court and prevented from taking his place in the House of Lords. Despite his best efforts, Bacon never returned to favour.

He spent his last five years in retirement, writing incessantly - at first with the hope of regaining office, or at least influence, and then merely to leave a testament to posterity.

He died on Easter Day 1626, according to John Aubrey (who had the story from Hobbes) from a cold contracted after an experiment of stuffing a chicken with snow.

As has often been remarked, it was a fitting end for so fervent an advocate of experimental science. 2 Works During the first two decades of his adult life Bacon wrote little, or at least little that survives; it was however in this period that his outlook and basic ideas were formed - certainly by the early 1590s, and probably earlier still; in 1625 he mentioned to a correspondent that forty years earlier he had advocated the reform of learning in a work (now lost) entitled Temporis Partus Maximus (The Greatest Birth of Time) .

The direction of Bacon's interests is apparent in a letter of 1592, written to Lord Burghley, in which he (rather disingenuously) disclaimed any political ambition while simultaneously indicating the scope of his intellectual projects: I confess that I have as vast contemplative ends, as I have moderate civil ends: for I have taken all knowledge to be my province; and if I could purge it of two sorts of rovers, whereof the one with frivolous disputations,. »

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