from Part I - Transnational, International, and Global
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 March 2020
This chapter explores the significance of scientific surveys of national territories in the development of modern science. National surveys have necessarily been linked to the centralizing tendencies of nation-states beginning especially during the eighteenth century. The surveys were considered scientific because they used the principals and methods of empirical physical science, astronomy, and abstract mathematics to produce precise and rigorous results. Surveying and mapping of national territories fulfilled an Enlightenment desire to rationalize and bring order to nature.
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