“Baconian Science and the Intelligibility of Human Experience: the Case of Love”

Minkov, S. “Baconian Science and the Intelligibility of Human Experience: the Case ofLove.” Review of Politics 71 (2009b): 389–410.

Abstract: “Perhaps surprisingly, one of the founders of the modern technological world, Francis Bacon, has a penetrating and sustained lifelong engagement with the phenomenon of love or eros. Bacon’s reflections on eros come in two stages. He first examines the human and moral meaning of love. Bacon attends to the exorbitant promises of love—to bring us into a perfect condition, to grant us eternity—and finds them confused or unreasonable. Bacon then moves away from an engagement with the simple experiences of love and their promises. Departing from the human perspective, he proceeds to examine love, from the point of view of natural science or cosmology, as a fundamental property or principle of matter. This departure tends to lead, at least in the case of Bacon’s followers, if not in Bacon’s own case, to an obliviousness to both his cynical and appreciative insights into love.”

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The Review of Politics