Among the scholars who are doing the history of science outside of the Whiggish
framework - the latter referring, of course, to Herbert Butterworth’s famous
phase about the framework that sees the history of science as essentially a
progress - Steven
Shapin and Simon Schaffer’s The Leviathan and the Air Pump is one of the most
cited texts. It focuses on the New Learning in 17th century England,
which was in many ways an extension of the Baconian experimental impulse.
Robert Boyle was not only the premier experimenter, but, more than Bacon, the
natural philosopher who set the rules for experimentation.
One of Shapin and Schaffer’s ideas is that the experimental method, depending
on witnesses for its veracity, evolves a prose style of witness. Shapin and
Schaffer point to Thomas Sprat’s injunctions about the proper mode of
representation in his history of the Royal Society – which was, in effect, also
a polemic on behalf of the society. Sprat enumerates the inveterate injury done
by rhetorical ornament, which was at first the “admirable instruments in the
hands of Wise Men” but now have turned disgusting – “They make the Fancy
disgust the best things, if they come sound and unadorn’d; they are in open
defiance against Reason, professing not to hold much correspondence with that,
but with its Slaves, the Passions; they give the mind a motion too changeable
and bewitching to consist with right practice.” In fact, as Sprat enumerates
the faults of the ornate style, he himself falls into a Passion – “For now I am
warmed with this just Anger” – but, apparently, this Slave is true to reason,
rather than its betrayer. And although Sprat sees the ornaments of rhetoric as
being almost beyond reform, he does make a very Protestant recommendation:
“They have therefore been most rigorous in putting in execution the only Remedy
that can be found for this extravagance, and that has been a constant
Resolution to reject all amplifications, digressions, and swellings of style;
to return back to the primitive purity and shortness, when men deliver’d so
many things almost in an equal number of words. They have exacted from all
their members a close, naked, natural way of speaking, positive expressions,
clear senses, a native easiness, bringing all things as near the Mathematical
plainness as they can, and preferring the language of Artizans, Countrymen, and
Merchants before that of Wits or Scholars.” [Critical Essays of the Seventeenth
Century, II,117-118]
Shapin has written a biographical sketch of Boyle that picks at what he was
like as a person – and how one would, at this distance, ever find out the facts
of what William James might call acquaintance.
Acquaintance is, of course, the very nub of witness.
Born of a rich, rapacious pioneer of the land grab game in
Ireland, an ennobled Elizabethan nabob who at one point might have been the
richest man in the Kingdom, Boyle’s father despised Ireland – which was the
source of his wealth – yet had his children taught Gaelic. Boyle himself
certainly retained in his own voice the Irish English intonation, one that his
tutors at Eton never could extinguish. More than that, Boyle he was a
stutterer. According to his own account, Boyle picked up the stuttering habit when
he was a boy from mocking the speech of others. Shapin imagines this might be
Boyle mocking the Irish English of others.
While his elder brother was one of the great rakes at Charles II’s court, Boyle
was an Anglican of a species now long extinct – an enthusiastic Anglican.
Recent work on Boyle has emphasized this aspect of his intellectual character.
While maintaining a corpuscular philosophy and advocating for the experimental
method, Boyle wrapped these concerns in a general world view that allowed him
to attack both Catholics and atheists for a wrongheaded view of God – both, in
his opinion, being all too eager to pull God into his creation, and thus
fumbling the very root of divinity: God’s exteriority to the world. It is that
exteriority that allows God to be a supreme chooser – he can chose the way the
world will be because he is not caught within it.
Boyle was an Anglican and directed his Free Enquiry, as well as his other
philosophical and theological treatises, against both the Catholics and the
‘atheists” – the latter comprehending all who would make God immanent in
nature, instead of standing outside it. But his brothers, as Shapin points out,
were notorious Restoration rakes – the very type to be attracted to the
libertine philosophy.
While the language of natural philosophy, for Sprat, is going to cast off the Wit’s devious metaphors and the disgusting fancies of the scholar in order to embrace the language of the artisan, Boyle, who was more noble than Merchant, had his own problems with taking the language of the vulgar for the instrument of the wisdom. For where, after all, are the vulgar getting their notions? Are they educated witnesses? Is there any way to escape ambiguity – which is, in its way, as disgusting as metaphor, insofar as it is not the plain way to truth:
“I have often look’d upon it as an unhappy thing, and prejudicial both to philosophy and physic, that the word nature hath been so frequently, and yet so unskillfully employ’d, by all sorts of men. For the very great ambiguity of this term, and the promiscuous use made of it, without sufficiently attending to its different significations, render many of the expressions wherein ‘tis employed, either unintelligible, improper or false. I, therefore, heartily wish, that philosophers,m and other leading me, would, by common consent, introduce some more significant, and less ambiguous terms and expressions, in the room of the licentious word nature; and the forms of speech that depend on it: or at least decline the use of it, as much as conveniently they can…”
Boyle’s observations are of course still current. The weight
of the false opposition between the “organic” and the “chemical” moves both the
vulgar and the high income crunchy folks. Whenever I encounter this weird
notion, I like to point out that the organic is as chemical as the synthetic. I
win so many friends this way!
Boyle does a rather wonderful thing about the word “nature”, which makes him
the founder, as it were, of the linguistic turn in philosophy – for he gives 8
rules for avoiding the word: 1. Use the word God for natura naturans; 2. use
the word essence, or quiddity (tho a barbarous term); 3 “If what is meant by
the word nature” is what ‘belongs to a living creature at its nativity” – say,
“the animal is born so” – or say that a thing has been generated such. 4. for
internal motion – say that the body moves spontaneously; 5. use – “the settled
course of things”; 6 for the “aggregate of powers belonging to a body” use
constitution, temper, mechanism or complex of the essential properties or
qualities; 7. when used for universe, use the word world, or universe; and 8.
“If, instead of using the word nature, taken for either a goddess, or a kind of
semi-deity; we wholly reject, or very seldom employ it.”
This is a text worth going back to.
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