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The English Scene Of The Seventeenth Century Is A Particularly Rich OneBelow is a free term papers summary of the paper "The English Scene Of The Seventeenth Century Is A Particularly Rich One." If you sign up, you can be reading the rest of this term papers in under two minutes. Registered users should login to view this term paper.
with regard to its contributions to the scientific revolution. The discovery and development of America moved Britain from the edge of the civilized world into the center of the new world, in which the sciences were to play a major role. During this period, in the field of chemistry, theories which offered direct opposition to Aristotelian natural philosophy and Paracelsian principles were rapidly disseminating. These notions had an immense influence in the scientific career of Robert Boyle, whose corpuscular philosophy was itself to direct the progress of chemistry for the next century. Robert Boyle (1627-1691) was born within a year of Francis Bacon's (1561-1626) death, and was widely regarded as his scientific heir. John Hughes, a contemporary writer, described him as 'designed by nature to succeed to the labours and enquiries of that extraordinary genius ...'. Robert was Richard Boyle's (1566-1643) seventh and youngest son. He was born in his father's mansion at Lismore in Munster, Ireland, on the twenty-fifth day of January 1627. As soon as Robert was old enough, his father, the First Earl of Cork, had him taught French and Latin. At the age of nine, he was sent, together with his elder brother Francis, to Eton, to be educated under the guidance of his father's friend Sir Henry Wotton (1568-1639). Wotton had spent many years in Venice as an ambassador, and was a cultured man; under Wotton, Eton had become a highly respectable and fashionable school. The instruction of the nine-year-old Boyle was supervised by the headmaster, John Harrison, who according to Crowther, 'created in the young Boyle a passion for learning.' It seems that Boyle's enthusiasm for reading was first awakened by Quintus Curtius's History of Alexander the Great's Conquests. However, according to Crowther, Boyle's imagination was animated only after his reading of Aadis de Gaule, and other fabulous stories. Boyle's readings at Eton so accustomed his mind to roving thoughts that ever afterwards he never quite succeeded in disciplining it; Crowther attributed Boyle's discursive style to this disposition. Boyle's father, like other Tudor Protestant aristocrats, liked his children to be brought up by men of pure Calvinist strain, to ensure their indoctrination against Roman Catholicism. Consequently, he engaged as his sons' governor and tutor M. Marcombes, a French gen... This is not the end of the termpaper! Register below to see the complete version of this term paper.
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