Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes on contributors
- Introduction
- 1 Revolution
- 2 Revolution in antiquity
- 3 Social devolution and revolution: Ta Thung and Thai Phing
- 4 The bourgeois revolution of 1848–9 in Central Europe
- 5 Socialist revolution in Central Europe, 1917–21
- 6 Imperialism and revolution
- 7 Socio-economic revolution in England and the origin of the modern world
- 8 Agrarian and industrial revolutions
- 9 On revolution and the printed word
- 10 Revolution in popular culture
- 11 Revolution in music – music in revolution
- 12 Revolution and the visual arts
- 13 Revolution and technology
- 14 The scientific revolution: a spoke in the wheel?
- 15 The scientific-technical revolution: an historical event in the twentieth century
- Index
14 - The scientific revolution: a spoke in the wheel?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2015
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes on contributors
- Introduction
- 1 Revolution
- 2 Revolution in antiquity
- 3 Social devolution and revolution: Ta Thung and Thai Phing
- 4 The bourgeois revolution of 1848–9 in Central Europe
- 5 Socialist revolution in Central Europe, 1917–21
- 6 Imperialism and revolution
- 7 Socio-economic revolution in England and the origin of the modern world
- 8 Agrarian and industrial revolutions
- 9 On revolution and the printed word
- 10 Revolution in popular culture
- 11 Revolution in music – music in revolution
- 12 Revolution and the visual arts
- 13 Revolution and technology
- 14 The scientific revolution: a spoke in the wheel?
- 15 The scientific-technical revolution: an historical event in the twentieth century
- Index
Summary
– ‘Kingdoms and provinces, and towns and cities, have they not their periods? and when those principles and powers, which at first cemented and put them together, have performed their several evolutions, they fall back.’ – Brother Shandy, said my uncle Toby, laying down his pipe at the word evolutions – Revolutions, I meant, quoth my father, – by heaven! I meant revolutions, brother Toby – evolutions is nonsense. – ‘Tis not nonsense – said my uncle Toby’.
Laurence Sterne, Tristram ShandyHistorians write about scientific revolutions as automatically as of political, economic or social revolutions: the ‘French revolution’ in chemistry led by Lavoisier is almost as familiar as the political revolution which cut off his head. Indeed, the idea that science advances by revolutionary leaps has long been with us, ever since the eighteenth century in fact. For, as Bernard Cohen has shown, it was Enlightenment propagandists for science from Fontenelle and the Encyclopédistes to Condorcet who first began to depict the transformations in astronomy and physics wrought by Copernicus, Newton and others as revolutionary breaks with the past, creating new eras in thought.
And significantly it was through being applied in this way to epochs in science that the term ‘revolution’ itself took on its present meaning. Traditionally, when used to describe political fortunes, ‘revolution’ had, of course, denoted change (the fall of one prince, the rise of a rival); but it was change within an essentially cyclical system in which all dynasties and empires had their rise and fall, their waxings, wanings and eclipses, for human affairs were governed by the endless ‘revolutions’ of Fortune's Wheel. In the traditional metaphor, in other words, it was the orbits of the planets, so gravid with astrological influence, which had defined and governed revolutions in sublunary affairs. But, from the early eighteenth century, the old equation of revolution with cycles began to yield to a secular, directional myth of human destiny.
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- Revolution in History , pp. 290 - 316Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1986
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