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- Francis Bacon was the founder of the modern scientific method. The
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- focus on the new scientific method is on orderly experimentation. For Bacon,
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- experiments that produce results are important. Bacon pointed out the need
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- for clear and accurate thinking, showing that any mastery of the world in
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- which man lives was dependent upon careful understanding. This understanding is based solely on
- the facts of this world and not as the ancients held it in ancient philosophy. This new modern
- science provides the foundation for modern political science. Bacon's political science completely
- separated
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- religion and philosophy. For Bacon, nothing exists in the universe except
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- individual bodies. Although he did not offer a complete theory of the nature
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- of the universe, he pointed the way that science, as a new civil religion,
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- might take in developing such a theory.
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- Bacon divided theology into the natural and the revealed. Natural
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- theology is the knowledge of God which we can get from the study of nature and
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- the creatures of God. Convincing proof is given of the existence of God but
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- nothing more. Anything else must come from revealed theology. Science and
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- philosophy have felt the need to justify themselves to laymen. The belief
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- that nature is something to be vexed and tortured to the compliance of man
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- will not satisfy man nor laymen. Natural science finds its proper method when
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- the 'scientist' puts Nature to the question, tortures her by experiment and
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- wrings from her answers to his questions. The House of Solomon is directly
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- related to these thoughts. "It is dedicated to the study of Works and the
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- Creatures of God" (Bacon, 436). Wonder at religious questions was natural,
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- but, permitted free reign, would destroy science by absorbing the minds and
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- concerns of men. The singular advantage of Christianity is its irrationality.
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- The divine soul was a matter for religion to handle. The irrational soul was
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- open to study and understanding by man using the methods of science.
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- The society of the NEW ATLANTIS is a scientific society. It is
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- dominated by scientists and guided by science. Science conquers chance and
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- determines change thus creating a regime permanently pleasant. Bensalem,
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- meaning "perfect son" in Hebrew, has shunned the misfortunes of time, vice and
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- decay. Bensalem seems to combine the blessedness of Jerusalem and the
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- pleasures and conveniences of Babylon. In Bacon's NEW ATLANTIS, the need for
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- man to be driven does not exist. Scarcity is eliminated thereby eliminating
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- the need for money. "But thus, you see, we maintain a trade, not for gold,
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- silver or jewels... nor for any other commodity of matter, but only for God's
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- first creature which was light" (Bacon, 437). This shows a devotion to truth
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- rather than victory and it emphasizes the Christian piety to which the
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- scientist is disposed by virtue of his science. As man observes and brings
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- the fruits of his observations together, he discover likeness' and
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- differences among events and objects in the universe. In this way he will
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- establish laws among happenings upon which he can base all subsequent action.
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- Bacon realized that sometimes religious ideas and the discoveries of nature
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- and careful observations were contradictory but he argued that society must
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- believe both.
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- The NEW ATLANTIS begins with the description of a ship lost at sea.
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- The crew "lift up their hearts and voices to God above, who showeth his
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- wonders in the deep, beseeching him of his mercy" (Bacon, 419). Upon spotting
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- land and discerning natives the sailors praise God. When a boarding party
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- comes to their ship to deliver messages, none of the natives speak. Rather,
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- the messages are delivered written on scrolls of parchment. The parchment is
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- "signed with a stamp of cherubins' wings... and by them a cross" (Bacon, 420).
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- To the sailors, the cross was "a great rejoicing, and as it were a certain
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- presage of good" (Bacon, 420). After the natives leave and return to the
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- ship, they stop and ask "Are ye Christians?" (Bacon, 421). When the sailors
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- confirm that they are, they are taken to the island of Bensalem. On Bensalem,
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- the sailors are 'confined' to their resting place and are attended to
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- according to their needs. The sailors reply, "God surely is manifested in
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- this land" (Bacon, 424). Upon talking to the governor the next day, he
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- exclaims "Ye knit my heart to you by asking this question, [the hope that
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- they might meet heaven], in the first place, for it showeth that you first
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- seek the kingdom of heaven" (Bacon, 427). This is not true. The sailors have
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- already sought food, shelter and care of the sick. In other words, they had
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- sought self preservation. As Bacon put it, "they had already prepared for
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- death" (Bacon, 419).
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- After the Feast of the Family, the father of Salomon's House has a
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- conference with the travelers. The father says, "I will give the greatest
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- jewel that I have. For I will impart to thee... a relation of the true state
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- of Salomon's House" (Bacon, 447). The greatest 'jewel' is not one of monetary
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- value but of knowledge. The father continues, "The End of our Foundation is
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- the Knowledge of Causes and secret motion of things, and the enlarging of the
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- bounds of Human Empire, to the affecting of all things possible" (bacon, 447).
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- This is the turning point from religion to science and science becoming the
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- new civil religion. From this comes the ability of human rule over Nature.
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- It was stated before that they were interested in "God's first creature which
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- was light" (Bacon, 437). This contradicts an earlier statement that "It is
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- dedicated to the study of Works and Creatures of God" (Bacon, 436). The
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- former obviously an indication to science as the latter is to religion.
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- Bacon stresses the importance of 'light' as the precursor of 'fruit'
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- to suggest that they are following the divine instrument. There are two
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- images used by Bacon to refer to knowledge, torture and light. The torture
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- refers to the violent twisting of nature's secrets. Nature must be conquered
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- but is not adverse to the conquest. The forces of Nature are against us, but
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- in a rather passive manner. Light, on the other hand, is the meaning for
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- natural philosophy. From Salomon's house there go forth 'merchants of light'
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- and 'lamps'. Light is identified with truth. Supposing that light is
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- symbolic of natural philosophy, then it dismisses the case of light being
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- divine philosophy. The light in Bacon is primarily the light of Nature. The
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- obvious contrast here is one between "gold and silver and light" (Bacon, 437).
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- Light, here is noble where gold and silver are base. The 'noble light' is for
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- the beneficence of all man. Bcaon took the modern spirit and weaved them
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- together so as to suggest a method by which man could master the universe. He
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- did this to the end that he might exhibit therein a model or description of a
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- college instituted for the interpreting of nature and the producing of great
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- works for the benefit of man.
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- The island community of Bensalem also has "two long and fair
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- galleries" (Bacon, 456). In one gallery the native place all manner of
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- patterns and samples of rare and excellent inventions. In the other gallery
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- are placed statues of inventors. It is interesting to note here that while
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- the island and its natives act in "so civil a fashion" (Bacon, 423) in
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- professing to be Christian and religious that they place science so high on
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- their list. Science is placed so high that instead of having statues of God
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- and his works, they erect statues of inventors of the western world thereby
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- showing their commonness and baseness to human preservation. They do,
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- however, have "certain hymns and services, which (we) say daily, of laud and
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- praise to God for his marvelous works" (Bacon, 457). But, even this is done
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- "for the illumination of (their) labors and the turning of them into good and
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- holy uses" (Bacon, 457). The statues are erected to the memory of what the
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- natives consider most important for in Bacon, the scientists are a consecrated
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- priesthood.
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- In Bacon's NEW ATLANTIS, religion plays an important role. However,
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- it is a role of cover-up. It covers up the true idea that Bacon is trying to
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- get across - science as the new civil religion. Although he relegated
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- religion into a realm of its own outside of and different from philosophy, he
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- held that there were religious laws that man must obey whether or not they
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- appeared reasonable. By freeing theology and philosophy, Bacon was able to
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- shape philosophy so that it might undertake an unbiased study of the universe.
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- This left man subject to the will of God and thereby shorn of his freedom. It
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- is obvious that this creation could not long satisfy the thinking mind as it
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- was far too contradictory. The laymen have a genuine thirst for knowledge yet
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- they cannot know what is uncovered either by religion or by science.