Bacon’s "epigram after epigram" in Book One provides a masterclass in identifying how the human mind is prone to error, urging readers to approach nature with a "middle path" between absolute knowledge and absolute doubt. Review: The New Organon - Lotz in Translation
Individual prejudices shaped by personal experience.
Francis Bacon’s ( Novum Organum ), first published in 1620, remains a towering achievement in the history of thought and a cornerstone for anyone interested in the foundations of the scientific method. A Revolutionary Vision of Knowledge
Bacon’s "epigram after epigram" in Book One provides a masterclass in identifying how the human mind is prone to error, urging readers to approach nature with a "middle path" between absolute knowledge and absolute doubt. Review: The New Organon - Lotz in Translation
Individual prejudices shaped by personal experience.
Francis Bacon’s ( Novum Organum ), first published in 1620, remains a towering achievement in the history of thought and a cornerstone for anyone interested in the foundations of the scientific method. A Revolutionary Vision of Knowledge