22 JAN 2014 by ideonexus

 Science is Connected to Prosperity

The progression of physical science is much more connected with your prosperity than is usually imagined. You owe to experimental philosophy some of the most important and peculiar of your advantages. It is not by foreign conquests chiefly that you are become great, but by a conquest of nature in your own country.
  1  notes

Greatness comes not from the conquest of foreign nations, but from the conquest of nature in your own country.

27 AUG 2012 by ideonexus

 On the Importance of Bacon

The most singular, as well as the most excellent, of all his works, is that which is now the least read, and which is at the same time the most useful; I mean his "Novum Scientiarum Organum." This is the scaffold by means of which the edifice of the new philosophy has been reared; so that when the building was completed, the scaffold was no longer of any use. Chancellor Bacon was still unacquainted with nature, but he perfectly knew, and pointed out extraordinarily well, all the paths which...
  1  notes

Barbarism discovered many useful inventions by accident, but Francis Bacon discovered natural philosophy according to Voltaire.

27 AUG 2012 by ideonexus

 Three Classes of Natural Philosopher

THOSE who have treated of natural pilosophy, may be nearly reduced to three classes. Of these some have been attributed to the several species of things, specific and occult qualities; on which, in a manner unknown, they make the operations of the several bodies to depend. The sum of the doctrine of the Schools derived from Aristotle and the Peripatetics is herein contained. They affirm that the several effects of the bodies arise from the particular natures of those bodies ariſe from the pa...
Folksonomies: philosophy hypothesis
Folksonomies: philosophy hypothesis
  1  notes

Those who name things, but give them no meaning, those who extrapolate big ideas from observed phenomena, but ideas subject to fancy, and those content to describe the simple basic principles and leave it at that.

27 AUG 2012 by ideonexus

 Newton's Rules of Reasoning in Natural Philosophy

RULE I   We are to admit no more causes of natural things, than such as are both true and sufficient to explain their appearances. To this purpose the philosophers say, that Nature does nothing in vain, and more is in vain, when less will serve; for Nature is pleased with simplicity, and affects not the pomp of superfluous causes.   RULE II   Therefore to the same natural effects we must, as far as possible, assign the same causes. As to respiration in a man, and in a beast; the desce...
  1  notes

A hint of Occam's razor and much induction.