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Bacon and the Empiricists

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Title: Bacon and the Empiricists


1
Bacon and the Empiricists
  • Daniela Rölz Isabel von Ploetz
  • SoSe 2004
  • Innovation, change and decision-making in
    international organisations

2
Bacon and the Empiricists
  • Francis Bacon, Life and political career
  • Bacons new directions
  • - Empiricism
  • - The New Organon
  • The Idea of Progress
  • - The Advancement of Learning
  • Bacons science falls on hard times
  • Other empiricists Locke, Hobbes
  • Conclusion
  • Discussion

3
Bacon and the Empiricists
  • Francis Bacon, Life and political career
  • Bacons new directions
  • - Empiricism
  • - The New Organon
  • The Idea of Progress
  • - The Advancement of Learning
  • Bacons science falls on hard times
  • Other empiricists Locke, Hobbes
  • Conclusion
  • Discussion

4
Francis Bacon (1561-1626)
5
Life Political Career
  • 1561 Sir Francis Bacon was born in London
  • 1573 entered Trinity College in Cambridge
  • 1584 elected to Parliament
  • 1601 plot to kidnap Queen Elizabeth I

6
Life Political Career
  • 1603 James I became king
  • 1604 Appointed Kings Counsel
  • 1618 Made Lord Chancellor
  • 1621 charged with bribery and prohibited from
    sitting in parliament
  • 1626 Francis Bacon died

7
Bacon and the Empiricists
  • Francis Bacon, Life and political career
  • Bacons new directions
  • - Empiricism
  • - The New Organon
  • The Idea of Progress
  • - The Advancement of Learning
  • Bacons science falls on hard times
  • Other empiricists Locke, Hobbes
  • Conclusion
  • Discussion

8
Empiricism
  • Philosophical movement in the 18th century.
  • All knowledge comes from experience
  • ? Rationalism (17th century) knowledge comes
    from concepts known instinctively through reason
    concepts innate ideas (Descartes)
  • Empiricists Francis Bacon, John Locke, Thomas
    Hobbes, George Berkeley

9
Bacons new directions
  • Bacon is often thought as the originator of
    Modern Empiricism.
  • He wrote a radical new way for discovering truth.
  • people shouldnt use the theories they had
    inherited

10
Bacons new directions
  • He was opposed to theories that come before the
    facts
  • We should start with observations and build our
    theories upon them
  • build knowledge on experience
  • knowledge shouldn't be built on little or
    unsystematic experience

11
The New Organon (1620)
  • Novum Organum or True Directions for the
    Interpretation of Nature
  • the Greek word organon means instrument or
    tool
  • new instrument for guiding and correcting the
    mind in its search for a true understanding of
    nature
  • Aphorism short saying, referred just to the way
    he wrote

12
The Idols
  • idols are characteristic errors, natural
    tendencies or defects of the mind
  • prevent the mind from achieving a full and
    accurate understanding of nature
  • idol derives from the Greek word eidolon (which
    means image or phantom)
  • According to Bacon Idols prejudices of the
    mind
  • they prevent a successful study of natural
    phenomena

13
1. Idols of tribe
  • prejudices arising from human nature
  • natural weaknesses like the senses (which are
    inherently dull and easily deceivable)
  • Bacon we tend to find regularity where there is
    actually randomness, etc.
  • tendency towards wishful thinking.
  • natural preference to accept, believe, and even
    prove what we would prefer to be true
  • tendency to rush into conclusions, instead of
    collecting evidence

14
2. Idols of cave
  • prejudices coming from psychic condition of the
    human soul
  • vary from individual to individual (unlike idols
    of tribe)
  • referring to our culture
  • reflect prejudices and beliefs that we have
    because of our cultural background (different
    family backgrounds, childhood experiences,
    education, training, gender, religion, social
    class, etc.)

15
3. Idols of marketplace
  • prejudices resulting from social relationships
  • hindrances to clear thinking
  • main culprit language (not only common speech,
    but also special discourses, vocabularies)
  • two types
  • names of things that do not exist
  • faulty, vague or misleading names for things that
    do exist (abstract qualities and value terms
    such as moist or useful,)
  • can be a source of confusion

16
4. The Idols of the Theatre
  • prejudices deriving from false philosophical
    systems
  • rather culturally acquired than inborn (like
    idols of cave)
  • metaphor of a theatre suggests artificial
    imitation of truth
  • Bacon idols derive mainly from schemes or
    systems of philosophy (Sophistical, Empirical,
    Superstitious P.)

17
Induction
  • opposite Deduction ? Drawing a particular
    conclusion from a general premises
  • Induction Drawing a conclusion based on your own
    experience
  • propositions axiom maxim

18
Induction (2)
  • problem general axioms prove false, all the
    intermediate axioms may be false as well
  • Bacon step by step from one axiom to another, so
    that the most general is not reached till the
    last ? each axiom step up on the ladder of
    intellect

19
Induction (3)
  • Bacon Induction is a lot more secure and
    scientific than deduction
  • necessary tool for the proper interpretation of
    nature
  • differs from the classic induction of Aristotle
    and other logicians
  • they always wanted to draw general conclusions as
    soon as possible
  • general conclusion basis for further work

20
Bacon and the Empiricists
  • Francis Bacon, Life and political career
  • Bacons new directions
  • - Empiricism
  • - The New Organon
  • The Idea of Progress
  • - The Advancement of Learning
  • Bacons science falls on hard times
  • Other empiricists Locke, Hobbes
  • Conclusion
  • Discussion

21
The Idea of Progress
  • 1605 The Advancement of Learning first
    important philosophical work
  • 3 Distempers of Learning
  • fantastical learning
  • contentious learning
  • delicate learning

22
The Idea of Progress
  • Fantastical learning
  • Could be called pseudo-science
  • Lack of real and substantial foundation
  • Professed by occultists and charlatans

23
The Idea of Progress
  • Contentious Learning
  • Criticized Aristotelian philosophy
  • Aim not new knowledge or deeper understanding,
    but endless debates

24
The Idea of Progress
  • Delicate Learning
  • according to the revival of Ciceronian rhetorical
    embellishment
  • criticized preoccupation with words and style

25
The Idea of Progress
  • Expanded version of the Advancement
  • 3 categories for a new division of human
    knowledge
  • History
  • Poesy
  • Philosophy
  • Prestige of Philosophy had to be elevated,
  • while that of history and literature (humanism)
    needed to be reduced.

26
Bacon and the Empiricists
  • Francis Bacon, Life and political career
  • Bacons new directions
  • - Empiricism
  • - The New Organon
  • The Idea of Progress
  • - The Advancement of Learning
  • Bacons science falls on hard times
  • Other empiricists Locke, Hobbes
  • Conclusion
  • Discussion

27
Bacons science falls on hard times
  • Reference to the past (literary and
    philosophical)
  • Latin was universal language of philosophy
  • Since 1860 translation of his works in English
  • Bacons theory lost its semiotic foundation

28
Bacon and the Empiricists
  • Francis Bacon, Life and political career
  • Bacons new directions
  • - Empiricism
  • - The New Organon
  • The Idea of Progress
  • - The Advancement of Learning
  • Bacons science falls on hard times
  • Other empiricists Locke, Hobbes
  • Conclusion
  • Discussion

29
Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679)
30
Thomas Hobbes
  • He helped Bacon to write down his ideas, when
    Bacons infirmities prevented him from doing it
    for himself.
  • After Bacons death, he presented a theory of
    social science
  • based on careful observation ? Baconian method of
    science

31
John Locke (1632-1704)
32
John Locke
  • Essay Concerning Human Understanding (1690)
  • He was the first to give a logic for Empiricism.
  • Main interest illuminating knowledge and
    examining its validity
  • Locke attempt to prove everything by nature and
    fact (like Bacon)

33
John Locke
  • He denied that there are innate ideas.
  • Human intellect clean sheet of paper
  • Everything which is written on it, takes its
    origin from experience
  • Experience external (sensation) and internal
    (reflection)

34
Bacon and the Empiricists
  • Francis Bacon, Life and political career
  • Bacons new directions
  • - Empiricism
  • - The New Organon
  • The Idea of Progress
  • - The Advancement of Learning
  • Bacons science falls on hard times
  • Other empiricists Locke, Hobbes
  • Conclusion
  • Discussion

35
Conclusion and Cultural Legacy
  • Universal Genius
  • political statesman and practical visionary
  • Many admirers (Kant, Voltaire)
  • controversial Bacons view that nature exists
    mainly for human use and benefit

36
Bacon and the Empiricists
  • Francis Bacon, Life and political career
  • Bacons new directions
  • - Empiricism
  • - The New Organon
  • The Idea of Progress
  • - The Advancement of Learning
  • Bacons science falls on hard times
  • Other empiricists Locke, Hobbes
  • Conclusion
  • Discussion

37
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