Francis BaconBritish Council, 1978 - 46 páginas 'He is the supreme English exemplar of the Baroque Man, a master of the traditions and methods of the past, able to exploit or surpass or vary them with adroit dislocations, reversals, twistings .... His goal was power for grand ends and philanthropic glory. He won both, and contempt as well.' So Professor Patrick sums up the career of Francis Bacon, one of the most versatile and many-sided of men in an age of extraordinary virtuosity and versatility. 'I have taken all knowledge to be my province', he wrote at the age of twenty-three, and he interested himself in all branches of learning known to his age. A superb English stylist distinguished in law and politics, he also awakened his contemporaries to the potentialities and achievements of science. He could assume any role and, as Professor Patrick points out, this suppleness has ensured that today, more than four hundred years since his birth, the controversies over his career and achievements still continue |
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... seen against the norms of his society , where men in power habitually sold offices to suitors , accepted lavish presents , indeed expected them . Bacon was unfortunate in that a scandal earlier that year had aroused a general wish to ...
... seen from the shape of the Novum Organum in 1620 , which is made up of aphorisms , derived ' from the senses and particulars ' ( IV , so ) . The practicality of the aphorism was that it was the direct fruit of observation and experiment ...
... seen by the space he gives to two episodes in which the King's enemies tried to disguise one of their number as a nobleman in order to embarrass the government : first the masquerade of Lambert Simnell as the Lord Plantagenet ( 45-59 ) ...
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Writers and Their Work: Francis Bacon ; by Brian Vickers, Tema 265 Brian Vickers Sin vista previa disponible - 1977 |