Metafact: Essayistic Science in Eighteenth-Century France
Why is science often considered the opposite of literature? Lars O. Erickson examines the relationship between these two fields in eighteenth-century France and finds that the major intellectual and scientific transitions of the period can be better understood by paying attention to literary developments, particularly in genres not traditionally associated with learned societies. Erickson examines works by Diderot and Maupertuis and identifies a shared renegade spirit he calls "essayistic science." He demonstrates how the essay, a vague genre characterized by an openness to lay audiences, a self-reflective character, and an insistence on broad overviews, was used to react to a crisis in knowledge and to question the production of facts. Consequently, essayistic science does not deal with facts but with "metafacts," breaking down scientific traditions and bridging objective science with subjective literature.
"1111437107"
Metafact: Essayistic Science in Eighteenth-Century France
Why is science often considered the opposite of literature? Lars O. Erickson examines the relationship between these two fields in eighteenth-century France and finds that the major intellectual and scientific transitions of the period can be better understood by paying attention to literary developments, particularly in genres not traditionally associated with learned societies. Erickson examines works by Diderot and Maupertuis and identifies a shared renegade spirit he calls "essayistic science." He demonstrates how the essay, a vague genre characterized by an openness to lay audiences, a self-reflective character, and an insistence on broad overviews, was used to react to a crisis in knowledge and to question the production of facts. Consequently, essayistic science does not deal with facts but with "metafacts," breaking down scientific traditions and bridging objective science with subjective literature.
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Metafact: Essayistic Science in Eighteenth-Century France

Metafact: Essayistic Science in Eighteenth-Century France

by Lars O. Erickson
Metafact: Essayistic Science in Eighteenth-Century France

Metafact: Essayistic Science in Eighteenth-Century France

by Lars O. Erickson

Paperback(1)

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Overview

Why is science often considered the opposite of literature? Lars O. Erickson examines the relationship between these two fields in eighteenth-century France and finds that the major intellectual and scientific transitions of the period can be better understood by paying attention to literary developments, particularly in genres not traditionally associated with learned societies. Erickson examines works by Diderot and Maupertuis and identifies a shared renegade spirit he calls "essayistic science." He demonstrates how the essay, a vague genre characterized by an openness to lay audiences, a self-reflective character, and an insistence on broad overviews, was used to react to a crisis in knowledge and to question the production of facts. Consequently, essayistic science does not deal with facts but with "metafacts," breaking down scientific traditions and bridging objective science with subjective literature.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780807892824
Publisher: UNC Department of Romance Studies
Publication date: 07/19/2004
Series: North Carolina Studies in the Romance Languages and Literatures , #278
Edition description: 1
Pages: 200
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Lars O. Erickson is assistant professor of French at the University of Rhode Island.
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