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Francis Bacon's Valerius Terminus and the Voyage to the "Great Instauration"

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Serjeantson, Richard  ORCID logo  https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5795-8055

Abstract

Francis Bacon's earliest surviving natural philosophical treatise (composed circa 1603) bears the title Valerius Terminus of the Interpretation of Nature. This study, resting on fresh attention to the surviving authorial manuscript, has three goals. It begins by identifying a lost precursor work apparently entitled "Of Active Knowledge." It then examines the significance of the pseudonyms Bacon chose to introduce his ideas, considering especially his invocation of Erasmus's emblem, the Roman deity Terminus. Finally, it shows how the Valerius Terminus's global vision of contemporary knowledge ultimately helped shape the iconography of Bacon's published Instauratio magna.

Description

Keywords

English literature, 1600-1699, Bacon, Francis(1561-1626), 0000 0001 2126 5700, prose, philosophical prose, <i>Valerius Terminus: Of the Interpretation of Nature with the Annotations of Hermes Stella</i>(1603), "Of Active Knowledge", <i>Instauratio Magna</i>, natural sciences, intellectual history

Journal Title

Journal of the History of Ideas: an international quarterly devoted to intellectual history

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0022-5037
1086-3222

Volume Title

78

Publisher

University of Pennsylvania Press (Penn Press)
Sponsorship
European Research Council (617391)