Lexington Books
Pages: 168
Trim: 6¼ x 9⅜
978-0-7391-8150-8 • Hardback • October 2013 • $120.00 • (£92.00)
978-0-7391-8151-5 • eBook • October 2013 • $114.00 • (£88.00)
Kimberly Hurd Hale is visiting assistant professor of politics at Washington and Lee University.
Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations
Chapters- Introduction
- Plato’s Atlantis
- Bacon’s Project: The New Atlantis in Context
- The Mind and Body: Critiquing the Society of Bensalem
- The Rule of Scientists
- Science, Technology, and the Founding of Modern Political Philosophy
- Conclusion: The Limits of Enlightenment
Bibliography
About the Author
Sir Francis Bacon’s New Atlantis is a puzzling, enigmatic work. Many scholars suppose it an enticement—a utopian vision of the paradise that modern science will usher in. Kimberly Hurd Hale begs to differ. She sees in it a word of warning to readers of discernment, and, in this closely argued book, she makes a powerful case that, in The New Atlantis, Bacon intimates that, if the proper steps are not taken, modern science may become the means by which a new species of tyranny is established.
— Paul Rahe, Hillsdale College
This provocative book contends that Bacon, founder of scientific utopianism, was also a doubter. He doubted the dogmatic extension of scientific method, cautioned against the dictatorial politics that his New Atlantis exhibits, and commended as correctives tradition, ancient political wisdom, and moderate liberalism. A stimulating interpretation of Bacon's crucial political-scientific work, which also confronts the burgeoning literature on Bacon and compares his politics with that of Hobbes and Condorcet.
— Robert Faulkner, Boston College
Hurd Hale’s is an important new book, providing both a rich intellectual history and an important corrective to the tradition of philosophical scholarship that assumes too great a distance between Bacon’s scientific and political thought. Indeed, her contention—that Bacon’s optimism regarding the modern fusion of science and liberal politics was tempered by a deep-seated skepticism regarding the sustainability of such a fusion—is likely to provoke the imagination of scholars for quite some time. A timely meditation on a timely subject.
— Jeremy J. Mhire, Louisiana Tech University
Stepping back from conventional assumptions about Bacon’s stature as a scientist, Kimberly Hurd Hale returns to his enigmatic, suggestively incomplete vision of a polity governed by the new sciences. With patience and interpretive persistence, she discovers in Bacon’s hopeful, strangely practical utopian project a deeper, nuanced meditation upon the limitations of scientific political organization, as well as Bacon’s debt to the ancients’ understanding of the city’s sustaining and mortal imperfections.
— John C. Briggs, University of California, Riverside
Francis Bacon’s "New Atlantis” in the Foundation of Modern Political Thought is an innovative, creative, and controversial analysis of the text. It challenges many of the dominant, long-standing interpretations of the text and, as a result, provides substantial grounds for further study and analysis.
— The Review of Politics