fbpx
Wikipedia

Francis Bacon

Francis Bacon, 1st Viscount St Alban[a] PC, QC (/ˈbkən/;[5] 22 January 1561 – 9 April 1626), also known as Lord Verulam, was an English philosopher and statesman who served as Attorney General and Lord Chancellor of England. Bacon led the advancement of both natural philosophy and the scientific method and his works remained influential even in the late stages of the Scientific Revolution.[6]

The Viscount St Alban
Portrait by Paul van Somer I, 1617
Lord High Chancellor of England
In office
7 March 1617 – 3 May 1621 (1617-03-07 – 1621-05-03)
MonarchJames I
Preceded bySir Thomas Egerton
Succeeded byJohn Williams
Attorney General of England and Wales
In office
26 October 1613 – 7 March 1617 (1613-10-26 – 1617-03-07)
MonarchJames I
Preceded bySir Henry Hobart
Succeeded bySir Henry Yelverton
Personal details
Born
Francis Bacon

(1561-01-22)22 January 1561
The Strand, London, England
Died9 April 1626(1626-04-09) (aged 65)
Highgate, Middlesex, England
Resting placeSt Michael's Church, St Albans
Spouse
(m. 1604)
Parents
EducationTrinity College, Cambridge (no degree)
Gray's Inn (call to bar)
Notable worksWorks by Francis Bacon
Signature

Philosophy career
Other namesLord Verulam
Notable workNovum Organum
Era
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolEmpiricism
Main interests
Notable ideas
Influences

Bacon has been called the father of empiricism.[7] He argued for the possibility of scientific knowledge based only upon inductive reasoning and careful observation of events in nature. He believed that science could be achieved by the use of a sceptical and methodical approach whereby scientists aim to avoid misleading themselves. Although his most specific proposals about such a method, the Baconian method, did not have long-lasting influence, the general idea of the importance and possibility of a sceptical methodology makes Bacon one of the later founders of the scientific method. His portion of the method based in scepticism was a new rhetorical and theoretical framework for science, whose practical details are still central to debates on science and methodology. He is famous for his role in the scientific revolution, begun during the Middle Ages, promoting scientific experimentation as a way of glorifying God and fulfilling scripture. He was renowned as a politician in Elizabethan England, as he held the office of Lord Chancellor.

Bacon was a patron of libraries and developed a system for cataloguing books under three categories – history, poetry, and philosophy – which could further be divided into specific subjects and subheadings. About books he wrote, "Some books are to be tasted; others swallowed; and some few to be chewed and digested."[8] The Shakespearean authorship thesis, which was first proposed in the mid-19th century, contends that Bacon wrote at least some and possibly all of the plays conventionally attributed to William Shakespeare.[9]

Bacon was educated at Trinity College at the University of Cambridge, where he rigorously followed the medieval curriculum, which was presented largely in Latin. He was the first recipient of the Queen's counsel designation, conferred in 1597 when Elizabeth I reserved him as her legal advisor. After the accession of James I in 1603, Bacon was knighted, then created Baron Verulam in 1618[2] and Viscount St Alban in 1621.[1][b] He had no heirs and so both titles became extinct on his death in 1626 at the age of 65. He died of pneumonia, with one account by John Aubrey stating that he had contracted it while studying the effects of freezing on meat preservation. He is buried at St Michael's Church, St Albans, Hertfordshire.[11]

Biography

Early life and education

 
A young Francis Bacon depicted in a National Portrait Gallery painting; the inscription around Bacon's head reads: Si tabula daretur digna animum mallem, Latin for "If one could but paint his mind".
 
The Italianate entry to York House, built around 1626 in Strand, the year of Bacon's death

Francis Bacon was born on 22 January 1561 at York House near Strand in London, the son of Sir Nicholas Bacon (Lord Keeper of the Great Seal) by his second wife, Anne (Cooke) Bacon, the daughter of the noted Renaissance humanist Anthony Cooke. His mother's sister was married to William Cecil, 1st Baron Burghley, making Burghley Bacon's uncle.[12]

Biographers believe that Bacon was educated at home in his early years owing to poor health, which would plague him throughout his life. He received tuition from John Walsall, a graduate of Oxford with a strong leaning toward Puritanism. He attended Trinity College at the University of Cambridge on 5 April 1573 at the age of 12,[13] living there for three years along with his older brother Anthony Bacon under the personal tutelage of Dr John Whitgift, future Archbishop of Canterbury. Bacon's education was conducted largely in Latin and followed the medieval curriculum. It was at Cambridge that Bacon first met Queen Elizabeth, who was impressed by his precocious intellect, and was accustomed to calling him "The young lord keeper".[14]

His studies brought him to the belief that the methods and results of science as then practised were erroneous. His reverence for Aristotle conflicted with his rejection of Aristotelian philosophy, which seemed to him barren, argumentative and wrong in its objectives.

On 27 June 1576, he and Anthony entered de societate magistrorum at Gray's Inn. A few months later, Francis went abroad with Sir Amias Paulet, the English ambassador at Paris, while Anthony continued his studies at home. The state of government and society in France under Henry III afforded him valuable political instruction.[15] For the next three years he visited Blois, Poitiers, Tours, Italy, and Spain.[16] There is no evidence that he studied at the University of Poitiers.[17] During his travels, Bacon studied language, statecraft, and civil law while performing routine diplomatic tasks. On at least one occasion he delivered diplomatic letters to England for Walsingham, Burghley, Leicester, and for the queen.[16]

The sudden death of his father in February 1579 prompted Bacon to return to England. Sir Nicholas had laid up a considerable sum of money to purchase an estate for his youngest son, but he died before doing so, and Francis was left with only a fifth of that money.[15] Having borrowed money, Bacon got into debt. To support himself, he took up his residence in law at Gray's Inn in 1579,[15] his income being supplemented by a grant from his mother Lady Anne of the manor of Marks near Romford in Essex, which generated a rent of £46.[18]

Parliamentarian

 
Bacon's statue at Gray's Inn in London's South Square

Bacon stated that he had three goals: to uncover truth, to serve his country, and to serve his church. He sought to achieve these goals by seeking a prestigious post. In 1580, through his uncle, Lord Burghley, he applied for a post at court that might enable him to pursue a life of learning, but his application failed. For two years he worked quietly at Gray's Inn, until he was admitted as an outer barrister in 1582.[19]

His parliamentary career began when he was elected MP for Bossiney, Cornwall, in a by-election in 1581. In 1584 he took his seat in Parliament for Melcombe in Dorset, and in 1586 for Taunton. At this time, he began to write on the condition of parties in the church, as well as on the topic of philosophical reform in the lost tract Temporis Partus Maximus. Yet he failed to gain a position that he thought would lead him to success.[15] He showed signs of sympathy to Puritanism, attending the sermons of the Puritan chaplain of Gray's Inn and accompanying his mother to the Temple Church to hear Walter Travers. This led to the publication of his earliest surviving tract, which criticized the English church's suppression of the Puritan clergy. In the Parliament of 1586, he openly urged execution for the Catholic Mary, Queen of Scots.[20]

About this time, he again approached his powerful uncle for help; this move was followed by his rapid progress at the bar. He became a bencher in 1586 and was elected a Reader in 1587, delivering his first set of lectures in Lent the following year. In 1589, he received the valuable appointment of reversion to the Clerkship of the Star Chamber, although he did not formally take office until 1608; the post was worth £1,600 a year.[15][1]

In 1588 he became MP for Liverpool and then for Middlesex in 1593. He later sat three times for Ipswich (1597, 1601, 1604) and once for Cambridge University (1614).[21]

He became known as a liberal-minded reformer, eager to amend and simplify the law. Though a friend of the crown, he opposed feudal privileges and dictatorial powers. He spoke against religious persecution. He struck at the House of Lords in its usurpation of the Money Bills. He advocated for the union of England and Scotland, which made him a significant influence toward the consolidation of the United Kingdom; and he later would advocate for the integration of Ireland into the Union. Closer constitutional ties, he believed, would bring greater peace and strength to these countries.[22][23]

Final years of the Queen's reign

 
Memorial to Bacon in the chapel of Trinity College, Cambridge

Bacon soon became acquainted with Robert Devereux, the 2nd Earl of Essex, Queen Elizabeth's favourite.[24] By 1591 he acted as the earl's confidential adviser.[15][24] In 1592, he was commissioned to write a tract in response to the Jesuit Robert Parson's anti-government polemic, which he titled Certain Observations Made upon a Libel, identifying England with the ideals of democratic Athens against the belligerence of Spain.[25] Bacon took his third parliamentary seat for Middlesex when in February 1593 Elizabeth summoned Parliament to investigate a Roman Catholic plot against her. Bacon's opposition to a bill that would levy triple subsidies in half the usual time offended the Queen: opponents accused him of seeking popularity, and for a time the Court excluded him from favour.[26]

When the office of Attorney General fell vacant in 1594, Lord Essex's influence was not enough to secure the position for Bacon and it was given to Sir Edward Coke. Likewise, Bacon failed to secure the lesser office of Solicitor General in 1595, the Queen pointedly snubbing him by appointing Sir Thomas Fleming instead.[1] To console him for these disappointments, Essex presented him with a property at Twickenham, which Bacon subsequently sold for £1,800.[27]

In 1597 Bacon became the first Queen's Counsel designate, when Queen Elizabeth reserved him as her legal counsel.[28] In 1597, he was also given a patent, giving him precedence at the Bar.[29] Despite his designations, he was unable to gain the status and notoriety of others. In a plan to revive his position he unsuccessfully courted the wealthy young widow Lady Elizabeth Hatton.[30] His courtship failed after she broke off their relationship upon accepting marriage to Sir Edward Coke, a further spark of enmity between the men.[31] In 1598 Bacon was arrested for debt. Afterward, however, his standing in the Queen's eyes improved. Gradually, Bacon earned the standing of one of the learned counsels.[32] His relationship with the Queen further improved when he severed ties with Essex—a shrewd move, as Essex would be executed for treason in 1601.[33]

With others, Bacon was appointed to investigate the charges against Essex. A number of Essex's followers confessed that Essex had planned a rebellion against the Queen.[34] Bacon was subsequently a part of the legal team headed by the Attorney General Sir Edward Coke at Essex's treason trial.[34] After the execution, the Queen ordered Bacon to write the official government account of the trial, which was later published as A DECLARATION of the Practices and Treasons attempted and committed by Robert late Earle of Essex and his Complices, against her Majestie and her Kingdoms ... after Bacon's first draft was heavily edited by the Queen and her ministers.[35][36]

According to his personal secretary and chaplain, William Rawley, as a judge Bacon was always tender-hearted, "looking upon the examples with the eye of severity, but upon the person with the eye of pity and compassion". And also that "he was free from malice", "no revenger of injuries", and "no defamer of any man".[37]

James I comes to the throne

 
Bacon, c. 1618

The succession of James I brought Bacon into greater favour. He was knighted in 1603. In another shrewd move, Bacon wrote his Apologies in defense of his proceedings in the case of Essex, as Essex had favoured James to succeed to the throne. The following year, during the course of the uneventful first parliament session, Bacon married Alice Barnham.[38] In June 1607, he was at last rewarded with the office of solicitor general[1] and, in 1608, he began working as the Clerkship of the Star Chamber. Despite a generous income, old debts still could not be paid. He sought further promotion and wealth by supporting King James and his arbitrary policies. In 1610, the fourth session of James's first parliament met. Despite Bacon's advice to him, James and the Commons found themselves at odds over royal prerogatives and the king's embarrassing extravagance. The House was finally dissolved in February 1611. Throughout this period Bacon managed to stay in the favor of the king while retaining the confidence of the Commons.

In 1613, Bacon was finally appointed attorney general, after advising the king to shuffle judicial appointments. As attorney general, Bacon, by his zealous efforts—which included torture—to obtain the conviction of Edmund Peacham for treason, raised legal controversies of high constitutional importance;[39] and successfully prosecuted Robert Carr, 1st Earl of Somerset, and his wife, Frances Howard, Countess of Somerset, for murder in 1616. The so-called Prince's Parliament of April 1614 objected to Bacon's presence in the seat for Cambridge and to the various royal plans that Bacon had supported. Although he was allowed to stay, parliament passed a law that forbade the attorney general to sit in parliament. His influence over the king had evidently inspired resentment or apprehension in many of his peers. Bacon, however, continued to receive the King's favour, which led to his appointment in March 1617 as temporary Regent of England (for a period of a month), and in 1618 as Lord Chancellor. On 12 July 1618 the king created Bacon Baron Verulam, of Verulam, in the Peerage of England; he then became known as Francis, Lord Verulam.[1]

Bacon continued to use his influence with the king to mediate between the throne and Parliament, and in this capacity he was further elevated in the same peerage, as Viscount St Alban, on 27 January 1621.[citation needed]

Lord Chancellor and public disgrace

 
Bacon and members of Parliament on the day of his 1621 political fall

Bacon's public career ended in disgrace in 1621. After he fell into debt, a parliamentary committee on the administration of the law charged him with 23 separate counts of corruption. His lifelong enemy, Sir Edward Coke, who had instigated these accusations,[40] was one of those appointed to prepare the charges against the chancellor.[41] To the lords, who sent a committee to enquire whether a confession was really his, he replied, "My lords, it is my act, my hand, and my heart; I beseech your lordships to be merciful to a broken reed." He was sentenced to a fine of £40,000 and committed to the Tower of London at the king's pleasure; the imprisonment lasted only a few days and the fine was remitted by the king.[42] More seriously, parliament declared Bacon incapable of holding future office or sitting in parliament. He narrowly escaped undergoing degradation, which would have stripped him of his titles of nobility. Subsequently, the disgraced viscount devoted himself to study and writing.

There seems little doubt that Bacon had accepted gifts from litigants, but this was an accepted custom of the time and not necessarily evidence of deeply corrupt behaviour.[43] While acknowledging that his conduct had been lax, he countered that he had never allowed gifts to influence his judgement and, indeed, he had on occasion given a verdict against those who had paid him. He even had an interview with King James in which he assured:

The law of nature teaches me to speak in my own defence: With respect to this charge of bribery I am as innocent as any man born on St. Innocents Day. I never had a bribe or reward in my eye or thought when pronouncing judgment or order... I am ready to make an oblation of myself to the King

— 17 April 1621[44]

He also wrote the following to Buckingham:

My mind is calm, for my fortune is not my felicity. I know I have clean hands and a clean heart, and I hope a clean house for friends or servants; but Job himself, or whoever was the justest judge, by such hunting for matters against him as hath been used against me, may for a time seem foul, especially in a time when greatness is the mark and accusation is the game.[45]

As the conduct of accepting gifts was ubiquitous and common practice, and the Commons was zealously inquiring into judicial corruption and malfeasance, it has been suggested that Bacon served as a scapegoat to divert attention from Buckingham's own ill practice and alleged corruption.[46]

The true reason for his acknowledgement of guilt is the subject of debate, but some authors speculate that it may have been prompted by his sickness, or by a view that through his fame and the greatness of his office he would be spared harsh punishment. He may even have been blackmailed, with a threat to charge him with sodomy, into confession.[43][47]

The British jurist Basil Montagu wrote in Bacon's defense, concerning the episode of his public disgrace:

Bacon has been accused of servility, of dissimulation, of various base motives, and their filthy brood of base actions, all unworthy of his high birth, and incompatible with his great wisdom, and the estimation in which he was held by the noblest spirits of the age. It is true that there were men in his own time, and will be men in all times, who are better pleased to count spots in the sun than to rejoice in its glorious brightness. Such men have openly libelled him, like Dewes and Weldon, whose falsehoods were detected as soon as uttered, or have fastened upon certain ceremonious compliments and dedications, the fashion of his day, as a sample of his servility, passing over his noble letters to the Queen, his lofty contempt for the Lord Keeper Puckering, his open dealing with Sir Robert Cecil, and with others, who, powerful when he was nothing, might have blighted his opening fortunes for ever, forgetting his advocacy of the rights of the people in the face of the court, and the true and honest counsels, always given by him, in times of great difficulty, both to Elizabeth and her successor. When was a "base sycophant" loved and honoured by piety such as that of Herbert, Tennison, and Rawley, by noble spirits like Hobbes, Ben Jonson, and Selden, or followed to the grave, and beyond it, with devoted affection such as that of Sir Thomas Meautys.[48]

Personal life

Religious beliefs

Bacon was a devout Anglican. He believed that philosophy and the natural world must be studied inductively, but argued that we can only study arguments for the existence of God. Information about God's attributes (such as nature, action, and purposes) can only come from special revelation. Bacon also held that knowledge was cumulative, that study encompassed more than a simple preservation of the past. "Knowledge is the rich storehouse for the glory of the Creator and the relief of man's estate," he wrote. In his Essays, he affirms that "a little philosophy inclineth man's mind to atheism, but depth in philosophy bringeth men's minds about to religion."[49]

Bacon's idea of idols of the mind may have self-consciously represented an attempt to Christianize science at the same time as developing a new, reliable scientific method; Bacon gave worship of Neptune as an example of the idola tribus fallacy, hinting at the religious dimensions of his critique of the idols.[50]

Bacon was against the splintering within Christianity, believing that it would ultimately lead to the creation of atheism as a dominant worldview, as indicated with his quote that "The causes of atheism are: divisions in religion, if they be many; for any one main division, addeth zeal to both sides; but many divisions introduce atheism."[51]

Marriage to Alice Barnham

 
Engraving of Alice Barnham

When he was 36, Bacon courted Elizabeth Hatton, a young widow of 20. Reportedly, she broke off their relationship upon accepting marriage to a wealthier man, Bacon's rival, Sir Edward Coke. Years later, Bacon still wrote of his regret that the marriage to Hatton had not taken place.[52]

At the age of 45, Bacon married Alice Barnham, the 13-year-old daughter of a well-connected London alderman and MP. Bacon wrote two sonnets proclaiming his love for Alice. The first was written during his courtship and the second on his wedding day, 10 May 1606. When Bacon was appointed lord chancellor, "by special Warrant of the King", Lady Bacon was given precedence over all other Court ladies. Bacon's personal secretary and chaplain, William Rawley, wrote in his biography of Bacon that his marriage was one of "much conjugal love and respect", mentioning a robe of honour that he gave to Alice and which "she wore unto her dying day, being twenty years and more after his death".[37]

However, an increasing number of reports circulated about friction in the marriage, with speculation that this may have been due to Alice's making do with less money than she had once been accustomed to. It was said that she was strongly interested in fame and fortune, and when household finances dwindled, she complained bitterly. Bunten wrote in her Life of Alice Barnham [53] that, upon their descent into debt, she went on trips to ask for financial favours and assistance from their circle of friends. Bacon disinherited her upon discovering her secret romantic relationship with Sir John Underhill, rewriting his will (which had generously planned to leave her lands, goods, and income) and revoking her entirely as a beneficiary.

Sexuality

Several authors believe that, despite his marriage, Bacon was primarily attracted to men.[54][55] Forker,[56] for example, has explored the "historically documentable sexual preferences" of both Francis Bacon and King James I and concluded they were both oriented to "masculine love", a contemporary term that "seems to have been used exclusively to refer to the sexual preference of men for members of their own gender."[57]

The well-connected antiquary John Aubrey noted in his Brief Lives concerning Bacon, "He was a Pederast. His Ganimeds and Favourites tooke Bribes".[58] ("Pederast" in Renaissance diction meant generally "homosexual" rather than specifically a lover of minors[citation needed]; "ganimed" derives from the mythical prince abducted by Zeus to be his cup-bearer and bed warmer.)

The Jacobean antiquarian Sir Simonds D'Ewes (Bacon's fellow Member of Parliament) implied there had been a question of bringing him to trial for buggery,[59] which his brother Anthony Bacon had also been charged with.[60]

In his Autobiography and Correspondence, in the diary entry for 3 May 1621, the date of Bacon's censure by Parliament, D'Ewes describes Bacon's love for his Welsh serving-men, in particular Godrick, a "very effeminate-faced youth" whom he calls "his catamite and bedfellow".[61]

This conclusion has been disputed by others, who point to lack of consistent evidence, and consider the sources to be more open to interpretation.[34][62][63][64][65] Publicly, at least, Bacon distanced himself from the idea of homosexuality. In his New Atlantis, he described his utopian island as being "the chastest nation under heaven", and "as for masculine love, they have no touch of it".[66]

Death

 
Monument to Bacon at his burial place in St Michael's Church in St Albans

On 9 April 1626, Francis Bacon died of pneumonia while at Arundel mansion at Highgate outside London.[67] An influential account of the circumstances of his death was given by John Aubrey's Brief Lives.[67] Aubrey's vivid account, which portrays Bacon as a martyr to experimental scientific method, had him journeying to High-gate through the snow with the King's physician when he is suddenly inspired by the possibility of using the snow to preserve meat:

They were resolved they would try the experiment presently. They alighted out of the coach and went into a poor woman's house at the bottom of Highgate hill, and bought a fowl, and made the woman exenterate it.

After stuffing the fowl with snow, Bacon contracted a fatal case of pneumonia. Some people, including Aubrey, consider these two contiguous, possibly coincidental events as related and causative of his death:

The Snow so chilled him that he immediately fell so extremely ill, that he could not return to his Lodging ... but went to the Earle of Arundel's house at Highgate, where they put him into ... a damp bed that had not been layn-in ... which gave him such a cold that in 2 or 3 days as I remember Mr Hobbes told me, he died of Suffocation.[68]

Aubrey has been criticized for his evident credulousness in this and other works; on the other hand, he knew Thomas Hobbes, Bacon's fellow-philosopher and friend. Being unwittingly on his deathbed, the philosopher dictated his last letter to his absent host and friend Lord Arundel:

My very good Lord,—I was likely to have had the fortune of Caius Plinius the elder, who lost his life by trying an experiment about the burning of Mount Vesuvius; for I was also desirous to try an experiment or two touching the conservation and in-duration of bodies. As for the experiment itself, it succeeded excellently well; but in the journey between London and High-gate, I was taken with such a fit of casting as I know not whether it were the Stone, or some surfeit or cold, or indeed a touch of them all three. But when I came to your Lordship's House, I was not able to go back, and therefore was forced to take up my lodging here, where your housekeeper is very careful and diligent about me, which I assure myself your Lordship will not only pardon towards him, but think the better of him for it. For indeed your Lordship's House was happy to me, and I kiss your noble hands for the welcome which I am sure you give me to it. I know how unfit it is for me to write with any other hand than mine own, but by my troth my fingers are so disjointed with sickness that I cannot steadily hold a pen.[69]

Another account appears in a biography by William Rawley, Bacon's personal secretary and chaplain:

He died on the ninth day of April in the year 1626, in the early morning of the day then celebrated for our Savior's resurrection, in the sixty-sixth year of his age, at the Earl of Arundel's house in Highgate, near London, to which place he casually repaired about a week before; God so ordaining that he should die there of a gentle fever, accidentally accompanied with a great cold, whereby the defluxion of rheum fell so plentifully upon his breast, that he died by suffocation.[70]

He was buried in St Michael's church in St Albans. At the news of his death, over 30 great minds collected together their eulogies of him, which were then later published in Latin.[71] He left personal assets of about £7,000 and lands that realised £6,000 when sold.[72] His debts amounted to more than £23,000, equivalent to more than £4m at current value.[72][73]

Philosophy and works

 
Sylva sylvarum, Bacon's history of ten centuries
 
Front page of a 1651 copy of Sylva sylvarum

Francis Bacon's philosophy is displayed in the vast and varied writings he left, which might be divided into three great branches:

Influence and legacy

Science

 
Statue of Bacon in the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C.
 
National Portrait Gallery painting of the front cover of The History of Royal-Society of London, picturing Bacon (right) among the founding influences of Royal Society

Bacon's seminal work Novum Organum was influential in the 1630s and 1650s among scholars, in particular Sir Thomas Browne, who in his encyclopedia Pseudodoxia Epidemica (1646–72) frequently adheres to a Baconian approach to his scientific enquiries. This book entails the basis of the scientific method as a means of observation and induction.

According to Bacon, learning and knowledge all derive from the basis of inductive reasoning. Through his belief in experimental encounters, he theorised that all the knowledge that was necessary to fully understand a concept could be attained using induction. In order to get to the point of an inductive conclusion, one must consider the importance of observing the particulars (specific parts of nature). "Once these particulars have been gathered together, the interpretation of Nature proceeds by sorting them into a formal arrangement so that they may be presented to the understanding."[81] Experimentation is essential to discovering the truths of Nature. When an experiment happens, parts of the tested hypothesis are started to be pieced together, forming a result and conclusion. Through this conclusion of particulars, an understanding of Nature can be formed. Now that an understanding of Nature has been arrived at, an inductive conclusion can be drawn. "For no one successfully investigates the nature of a thing in the thing itself; the inquiry must be enlarged to things that have more in common with it."[82]

Bacon explains how we come to this understanding and knowledge because of this process in comprehending the complexities of nature. "Bacon sees nature as an extremely subtle complexity, which affords all the energy of the natural philosopher to disclose her secrets."[83] Bacon described the evidence and proof revealed through taking a specific example from nature and expanding that example into a general, substantial claim of nature. Once we understand the particulars in nature, we can learn more about it and become surer of things occurring in nature, gaining knowledge and obtaining new information all the while. "It is nothing less than a revival of Bacon's supremely confident belief that inductive methods can provide us with ultimate and infallible answers concerning the laws and nature of the universe."[84] Bacon states that when we come to understand parts of nature, we can eventually understand nature better as a whole because of induction. Because of this, Bacon concludes that all learning and knowledge must be drawn from inductive reasoning.

During the Restoration, Bacon was commonly invoked as a guiding spirit of the Royal Society founded under Charles II in 1660.[85][86] During the 18th-century French Enlightenment, Bacon's non-metaphysical approach to science became more influential than the dualism of his French contemporary Descartes, and was associated with criticism of the Ancien Régime. In 1733 Voltaire introduced him to a French audience as the "father" of the scientific method, an understanding which had become widespread by the 1750s.[87] In the 19th century his emphasis on induction was revived and developed by William Whewell, among others. He has been reputed as the "Father of Experimental Philosophy".[88]

He also wrote a long treatise on Medicine, History of Life and Death,[89] with natural and experimental observations for the prolongation of life.

One of his biographers, the historian William Hepworth Dixon, states: "Bacon's influence in the modern world is so great that every man who rides in a train, sends a telegram, follows a steam plough, sits in an easy chair, crosses the channel or the Atlantic, eats a good dinner, enjoys a beautiful garden, or undergoes a painless surgical operation, owes him something."[90]

In 1902 Hugo von Hofmannsthal published a fictional letter, known as The Lord Chandos Letter, addressed to Bacon and dated 1603, about a writer who is experiencing a crisis of language.

North America

 
A Newfoundland stamp, which reads: "Lord Bacon – the guiding spirit in colonization scheme"

Bacon played a leading role in establishing the British colonies in North America, especially in Virginia, the Carolinas and Newfoundland in northeastern Canada. His government report on "The Virginia Colony" was submitted in 1609. In 1610 Bacon and his associates received a charter from the king to form the Tresurer and the Companye of Adventurers and planter of the Cittye of London and Bristoll for the Collonye or plantacon in Newfoundland, and sent John Guy to found a colony there.[91] Thomas Jefferson, the third President of the United States, wrote: "Bacon, Locke and Newton. I consider them as the three greatest men that have ever lived, without any exception, and as having laid the foundation of those superstructures which have been raised in the Physical and Moral sciences".[92]

In 1910, Newfoundland issued a postage stamp to commemorate Bacon's role in establishing the colony. The stamp describes Bacon as "the guiding spirit in Colonization Schemes in 1610".[52] Moreover, some scholars believe he was largely responsible for the drafting, in 1609 and 1612, of two charters of government for the Virginia Colony.[93] William Hepworth Dixon considered that Bacon's name could be included in the list of Founders of the United States.[94]

Law

Although few of his proposals for law reform were adopted during his lifetime, Bacon's legal legacy was considered by the magazine New Scientist in 1961 as having influenced the drafting of the Napoleonic Code as well as the law reforms introduced by 19th-century British Prime Minister Sir Robert Peel.[95] The historian William Hepworth Dixon referred to the Napoleonic Code as "the sole embodiment of Bacon's thought", saying that Bacon's legal work "has had more success abroad than it has found at home", and that in France "it has blossomed and come into fruit".[96]

Harvey Wheeler attributed to Bacon, in Francis Bacon's Verulamium—the Common Law Template of The Modern in English Science and Culture, the creation of these distinguishing features of the modern common law system:

  • using cases as repositories of evidence about the "unwritten law";
  • determining the relevance of precedents by exclusionary principles of evidence and logic;
  • treating opposing legal briefs as adversarial hypotheses about the application of the "unwritten law" to a new set of facts.

As late as the 18th century, some juries still declared the law rather than the facts, but already before the end of the 17th century Sir Matthew Hale explained modern common law adjudication procedure and acknowledged Bacon as the inventor of the process of discovering unwritten laws from the evidences of their applications. The method combined empiricism and inductivism in a new way that was to imprint its signature on many of the distinctive features of modern English society.[97] Paul H. Kocher writes that Bacon is considered by some jurists to be the father of modern Jurisprudence.[80]

Bacon is commemorated with a statue in Gray's Inn, South Square in London where he received his legal training, and where he was elected Treasurer of the Inn in 1608.[98]

More recent scholarship on Bacon's jurisprudence has focused on his advocating torture as a legal recourse for the crown.[99] Bacon himself was not a stranger to the torture chamber; in his various legal capacities in both Elizabeth I's and James I's reigns, Bacon was listed as a commissioner on five torture warrants. In 1613(?), in a letter addressed to King James I on the question of torture's place within English law, Bacon identifies the scope of torture as a means to further the investigation of threats to the state: "In the cases of treasons, torture is used for discovery, and not for evidence."[100] For Bacon, torture was not a punitive measure, an intended form of state repression, but instead offered a modus operandi for the government agent tasked with uncovering acts of treason.

Organization of knowledge

Francis Bacon developed the idea that a classification of knowledge must be universal while handling all possible resources. In his progressive view, humanity would be better if access to educational resources were provided to the public, hence the need to organise it. His approach to learning reshaped the Western view of knowledge theory from an individual to a social interest.

The original classification proposed by Bacon organised all types of knowledge into three general groups: history, poetry, and philosophy. He did that based on his understanding of how information is processed: memory, imagination, and reason, respectively. His methodical approach to the categorization of knowledge goes hand-in-hand with his principles of scientific methods. Bacon's writings were the starting point for William Torrey Harris's classification system for libraries in the United States by the second half of the 1800s.

The phrase "scientia potentia est" (or "scientia est potentia"), meaning "knowledge is power", is commonly attributed to Bacon: the expression "ipsa scientia potestas est" ("knowledge itself is power") occurs in his Meditationes Sacrae (1597).

Historical debates

Bacon and Shakespeare

The Baconian hypothesis of Shakespearean authorship, first proposed in the mid-19th century, contends that Francis Bacon wrote some or even all of the plays conventionally attributed to William Shakespeare.[9]

Occult theories

 
An old volume of Bacon and a rose

Francis Bacon often gathered with the men at Gray's Inn to discuss politics and philosophy, and to try out various theatrical scenes that he admitted writing.[101] Bacon's alleged connection to the Rosicrucians and the Freemasons has been widely discussed by authors and scholars in many books.[63] However, others, including Daphne du Maurier in her biography of Bacon, have argued that there is no substantive evidence to support claims of involvement with the Rosicrucians.[102] Frances Yates[103] does not make the claim that Bacon was a Rosicrucian, but presents evidence that he was nevertheless involved in some of the more closed intellectual movements of his day. She argues that Bacon's movement for the advancement of learning was closely connected with the German Rosicrucian movement, while Bacon's New Atlantis portrays a land ruled by Rosicrucians. He apparently saw his own movement for the advancement of learning to be in conformity with Rosicrucian ideals.[104]

The link between Bacon's work and the Rosicrucians' ideals which Yates allegedly found was the conformity of the purposes expressed by the Rosicrucian Manifestos and Bacon's plan of a "Great Instauration",[104] for the two were calling for a reformation of both "divine and human understanding",[d][105] as well as both, had in view the purpose of mankind's return to the "state before the Fall".[e][f]

Another major link is said to be the resemblance between Bacon's New Atlantis and the German Rosicrucian Johann Valentin Andreae's Description of the Republic of Christianopolis (1619).[106] Andreae describes a utopic island in which Christian theosophy and applied science ruled, and in which the spiritual fulfilment and intellectual activity constituted the primary goals of each individual, the scientific pursuits being the highest intellectual calling—linked to the achievement of spiritual perfection. Andreae's island also depicts a great advancement in technology, with many industries separated in different zones which supplied the population's needs—which shows great resemblance to Bacon's scientific methods and purposes.[107][108]

While rejecting occult conspiracy theories surrounding Bacon and the claim Bacon personally identified as a Rosicrucian, intellectual historian Paolo Rossi has argued for an occult influence on Bacon's scientific and religious writing. He argues that Bacon was familiar with early modern alchemical texts and that Bacon's ideas about the application of science had roots in Renaissance magical ideas about science and magic facilitating humanity's domination of nature.[109] Rossi further interprets Bacon's search for hidden meanings in myth and fables in such texts as The Wisdom of the Ancients as succeeding earlier occultist and Neoplatonic attempts to locate hidden wisdom in pre-Christian myths.[110] As indicated by the title of his study, however, Rossi claims Bacon ultimately rejected the philosophical foundations of occultism as he came to develop a form of modern science.[109]

Rossi's analysis and claims have been extended by Jason Josephson-Storm in his study, The Myth of Disenchantment. Josephson-Storm also rejects conspiracy theories surrounding Bacon and does not make the claim that Bacon was an active Rosicrucian. However, he argues that Bacon's "rejection" of magic actually constituted an attempt to purify magic of Catholic, demonic, and esoteric influences and to establish magic as a field of study and application paralleling Bacon's vision of science. Furthermore, Josephson-Storm argues that Bacon drew on magical ideas when developing his experimental method.[111] Josephson-Storm finds evidence that Bacon considered nature a living entity, populated by spirits, and argues Bacon's views on the human domination and application of nature actually depend on his spiritualism and personification of nature.[112]

The Rosicrucian organization AMORC claims that Bacon was the "Imperator" (leader) of the Rosicrucian Order in both England and the European continent, and would have directed it during his lifetime.[113]

Bacon's influence can also be seen on a variety of religious and spiritual authors, and on groups that have utilized his writings in their own belief systems.[114][115][116][117][118]

Bibliography

 
Front page of a 1779 copy of Bacon's Novum Organum, authored in 1620

Some of the more notable works by Bacon are:

  • Essays
    • 1st edition with 10 essays (1597)
    • 2nd edition with 38 essays (1612)
    • 3rd/final edition with 58 essays (1625)
  • The Advancement and Proficience of Learning Divine and Human (1605)
  • Instauratio magna (The Great Instauration) (1620) – a multi-part work including Distributio operis (Plan of the Work); Novum Organum (The New Organon); Parasceve ad historiam naturalem (Preparatory for Natural History) and Catalogus historiarum particularium (Catalogue of Particular Histories)[119]
  • De augmentis scientiarum (1623) – an enlargement of The Advancement of Learning translated into Latin
  • New Atlantis (1626)

See also

Notes

  1. ^ There is confusion over the spelling of Bacon's title. Some sources, such as the 2007 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography and the 9th edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica, spell it "St Alban";[1][2] others, such as the Dictionary of National Biography (1885) and the 11th edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica, spell the title "St Albans".[3][4]
  2. ^ Contemporary spelling, used by Bacon himself in his letter of thanks to the king for his elevation.[10]
  3. ^ Ben: "son"; Salem: "peace", "peaceful" or "at peace".[77][78]
  4. ^ "Howbeit we know after a time there wil now be a general reformation, both of divine and humane things, according to our desire, and the expectation of others: for it's fitting, that before the rising of the Sun, there should appear and break forth Aurora, or some clearness, or divine light in the sky" – Fama Fraternitatis (sacred-texts.com 14 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine)
  5. ^ "Like good and faithful guardians, we may yield up their fortune to mankind upon the emancipation and majority of their understanding, from which must necessarily follow an improvement of their estate [...]. For man, by the fall, fell at the same time from his state of innocency and from his dominion over creation. Both of these losses however can even in this life be in some part repaired; the former by religion and faith, the latter by arts and sciences. – Francis Bacon, Novum Organum
  6. ^ "We ought therefore here to observe well, and make it known unto everyone, that God hath certainly and most assuredly concluded to send and grant to the whole world before her end ... such a truth, light, life, and glory, as the first man Adam had, which he lost in Paradise, after which his successors were put and driven, with him, to misery. Wherefore there shall cease all servitude, falsehood, lies, and darkness, which by little and little, with the great world's revolution, was crept into all arts, works, and governments of men, and have darkened most part of them". – Confessio Fraternitatis

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Peltonen 2007.
  2. ^ a b Adamson 1878, p. 200.
  3. ^ Fowler 1885, p. 346.
  4. ^ Adamson & Mitchell 1911, p. 135.
  5. ^ "Bacon" 15 June 2018 at the Wayback Machine entry in Collins English Dictionary.
  6. ^ Klein, Jürgen (2012), "Francis Bacon", in Zalta, Edward N. (ed.), The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Winter 2016 ed.), Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University, retrieved 17 January 2020
  7. ^ . Sweet Briar College. Archived from the original on 8 July 2013. Retrieved 21 October 2013.
  8. ^ Murray, Stuart (2009). The library : an illustrated history. Nicholas A. Basbanes, American Library Association. New York, New York. ISBN 978-1-60239-706-4. OCLC 277203534.
  9. ^ a b Dobson, Michael (2001). The Oxford Companion to Shakespeare. Oxford University Press. p. 33.
  10. ^ Birch, Thomas (1763). Letters, Speeches, Charges, Advices, &c of Lord Chancellor Bacon. Vol. 6. London: Andrew Millar. pp. 271–272. OCLC 228676038.
  11. ^ Scott Wilson, Resting Places: The Burial Sites of More Than 14,000 Famous Persons, 3rd ed.: 2 (Kindle Locations 2105–2106). McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers. Kindle Edition.
  12. ^ Pollard 1911, p. 816.
  13. ^ "Bacon, Francis (BCN573F)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  14. ^ Collins, Arthur (1741). The English Baronetage: Containing a Genealogical and Historical Account of All the English Baronets, Now Existing: Their Descents, Marriages, and Issues; Memorable Actions, Both in War, and Peace; Religious and Charitable Donations; Deaths, Places of Burial and Monumental Inscriptions. Printed for Tho. Wotton at the Three Daggers and Queen's Head. p. 5.
  15. ^ a b c d e f Adamson & Mitchell 1911, p. 136.
  16. ^ a b Stephen Gaukroger (2001). Francis Bacon and the Transformation of Early-Modern Philosophy. Cambridge University Press, p. 46.
  17. ^ Francis Bacon, The Advancement of Learning, Clarendon Press, 1876, p. ix.
  18. ^ Spall, JEH (1971). "Francis Bacon's connections with Marks Manor House". Romford Record. Romford: Romford and District Historical Society. No. 4: 32–37.
  19. ^ Ellis, Robert. P. (27 April 2015). Francis Bacon: The Double-Edged Life of the Philosopher and Statesman. McFarland. p. 28.
  20. ^ Jardine, L. (1986), Francis Bacon: Discovery and the Art of Discourse, Cambridge University Press.
  21. ^ "History of Parliament". Retrieved 2 October 2011.
  22. ^ Spedding, James (1861). "The letters and life of Francis Bacon". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  23. ^ . Archived from the original on 7 August 2011. Retrieved 24 January 2013.
  24. ^ a b Paul E. J. Hammer (1999). "The Polarisation of Elizabethan Politics: The Political Career of Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex, 1585–1597". p. 141. Cambridge University Press
  25. ^ Gustav Ungerer (1974). "A Spaniard in Elizabethan England: The Correspondence of Antonio Pérez's Exile, Volume 1". p. 207. Tamesis Books
  26. ^ Weir, Alison Elizabeth the Queen Pimlico 1999 p. 414
  27. ^ Bunten, Alice Chambers. Twickenham Park and Old Richmond Palace and Francis Bacon: Lord Verulam's Connection with The, 1580–1608. R. Banks. p. 19.
  28. ^ Holdsworth, W. S. (1938). History of English Law. pp. vi 473–474.
  29. ^ Patent Rolls, 2 Jac I p. 12 m 10.
  30. ^ Longueville, Thomas (1909). The Curious Case of Lady Purbeck; A Scandal of the XVIIth Century. London: Longmans, Green and Co. p. 4.
  31. ^ Aughterson, Kate. "Hatton, Elizabeth, Lady Hatton [nee Lady Elizabeth Cecil] (1578–1646)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography – via Oxford University Press.
  32. ^ Adamson & Mitchell 1911, p. 137.
  33. ^ Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Encyclopaedia Britannica, Inc. 2008. p. 636.
  34. ^ a b c Nieves Matthews, Francis Bacon: The History of a Character Assassination (Yale University Press, 1996)
  35. ^ Adamson & Mitchell 1911, p. 138.
  36. ^ Matthews (1996: 56–57)
  37. ^ a b Rawley, William (1670). . London: Thomas Johns. Archived from the original on 5 August 2019. Retrieved 4 February 2012.
  38. ^ Adamson & Mitchell 1911, p. 139.
  39. ^ Lee, Sidney (1895). "Peachem, Edmond". The Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 44. Smith, Elder & Co.
  40. ^ Ousby, Ian (1996), The Cambridge Paperback Guide to Literature in English, Cambridge University Press, p. 22, ISBN 978-0-521-43627-4.
  41. ^ Zagorin, Perez (1999), Francis Bacon, Princeton University Press, p. 22, ISBN 978-0-691-00966-7.
  42. ^ Parris, Matthew; Maguire, Kevin (2004). "Francis Bacon – 1621". Great Parliamentary Scandals. London: Chrysalis. pp. 8–9. ISBN 978-1-86105-736-5.
  43. ^ a b Zagorin, Perez (1999). Francis Bacon. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. pp. 22–23. ISBN 978-0-691-00966-7.
  44. ^ Campbell, John; Baron Campbell (1818), J. Murray. "The Lives of the Lord Chancellors and Keepers of the Great Seal of England"
  45. ^ Fowler 1885, p. 347.
  46. ^ Express, Britain. "The Duke of Buckingham and Sir Francis Bacon". Britain Express. Retrieved 31 October 2022.
  47. ^ A. L. Rowse, quoted in Parris; Maguire (2004: 8): "a charge of sodomy was... to be brought against the sixty-year-old Lord Chancellor".
  48. ^ Montagu, Basil (1837). Essays and Selections. pp. 325–326. ISBN 978-1-4368-3777-4.
  49. ^ Bacon, Francis (1625). The Essayes Or Covnsels, Civill and Morall, of Francis Lo. Vervlam, Viscovnt St. Alban. London. p. 90. Retrieved 7 July 2019.
  50. ^ Josephson-Storm 2017, pp. 48–49.
  51. ^ Bacon, Francis (1909–1914). [Bartelby.com Essays, Civil and Moral. The Harvard Classics] (Vol III.Part 1 ed.). New York: PF Collier and Son. {{cite book}}: Check |url= value (help)
  52. ^ a b Alfred Dodd, Francis Bacon's Personal Life Story', Volume 2 – The Age of James, England: Rider & Co., 1949, 1986. pp. 157–158, 425, 502–503, 518–532
  53. ^ Alice Chambers Bunten, Life of Alice Barnham, Wife of Sir Francis Bacon, London: Oliphants Ltd. 1928.
  54. ^ A. L. Rowse, Homosexuals in History, New York: Carroll & Garf, 1977. p. 44
  55. ^ Jardine, Lisa; Stewart, Alan Hostage To Fortune: The Troubled Life of Francis Bacon Hill & Wang, 1999. p. 148
  56. ^ Charles R. Forker, "'Masculine Love', Renaissance Writing, and the 'New Invention' of Homosexuality: An Addendum" in the Journal of Homosexuality (1996), Indiana University
  57. ^ Journal of Homosexuality, Volume: 31 Issue: 3, 1996, pp. 85–93, ISSN 0091-8369
  58. ^ Oliver Lawson Dick, ed. Aubrey's Brief Lives. Edited from the Original Manuscripts, 1949, s.v. "Francis Bacon, Viscount of St. Albans" p. 11.
  59. ^ Fulton Anderson, Francis Bacon: His career and his thought, Los Angeles, 1962
  60. ^ du Maurier, Daphne (1975). Golden Lads: A Study of Anthony Bacon, Francis and Their Friends. London: Gollancz. ISBN 978-1-84408-073-1.
  61. ^ Aldrich, Robert; Wotherspoon, Gary (2005). Who's Who in Gay and Lesbian History Vol.1: From Antiquity to the Mid-Twentieth Century. London and New York: Routledge. p. 33. ISBN 978-0-415-15982-1.
  62. ^ Ross Jackson, The Companion to Shaker of the Speare: The Francis Bacon Story, England: Book Guild Publishing, 2005. pp. 45–46
  63. ^ a b Bryan Bevan, The Real Francis Bacon, England: Centaur Press, 1960
  64. ^ Helen Veale, Son of England, India: Indo Polish Library, 1950
  65. ^ Peter Dawkins, Dedication to the Light, England: Francis Bacon Research Trust, 1984
  66. ^ Bacon, Francis. The New Atlantis. 1627
  67. ^ a b The Broadview Anthology of Seventeenth-Century Prose. Broadview Press. 21 March 2001. p. 18.
  68. ^ Bowen, Catherine (1 January 1993). Francis Bacon: The Temper of a Man. Fordham University Press. p. 225.
  69. ^ Bacon, Francis (1825–1834). Montagu, Basil (ed.). The works of Francis Bacon, lord chancellor of England. Vol. 12. London: W. Pickering. p. 274.
  70. ^ Rawley, William (Bacon's personal secretary and chaplain) (1657), Resuscitatio, or, Bringing into Publick Light Several Pieces of the Works, Civil, Historical, Philosophical, & Theological, Hitherto Sleeping; of the Right Honourable Francis Bacon. ...Together with his Lordship's Life, Francis Bacon, the glory of his age and nation, the adorner and ornament of learning, was born in York House, or York Place, in the Strand, on the two and twentieth day of January, in the year of our Lord 1560.
  71. ^ Gundry, W.G.C. (ed.), Manes Verulamani This important volume consists of 32 eulogies originally published in Latin shortly after Bacon's funeral in 1626. Bacon's peers refer to him as "a supreme poet" and "a concealed poet", and also link him with the theatre.
  72. ^ a b Lovejoy, Benjamin (1888). Francis Bacon: A Critical Review. London: Unwin. p. 171. OCLC 79886184.
  73. ^ Officer, Lawrence; Williamson, Samuel. "Purchasing Power of British Pounds from 1264 to Present". Measuring Worth. Retrieved 1 December 2021.
  74. ^ Farrington 1964.
  75. ^ Bacon, Francis (1620). The Great Instauration  – via Wikisource.
  76. ^ Bacon, Francis, "Of Superstition" , Essays, civil and moral , Harvard Classics.
  77. ^ "Ben", Meaning, Abarim.
  78. ^ "Salem", Meaning, Abarim.
  79. ^ Bacon, Francis (1996). Meditationes Sacrae. ISBN 9781564596413.
  80. ^ a b Kocher, Paul (1957). "Francis Bacon and the Science of Jurisprudence". Journal of the History of Ideas. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. 8 (1): 3–26. doi:10.2307/2707577. JSTOR 2707577.
  81. ^ Turner, Henry S. (2013). "Francis Bacon's Common Notion". Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies. 13 (3): 7–32. doi:10.1353/jem.2013.0023. ISSN 1553-3786. S2CID 153693271.
  82. ^ Bacon, Francis (1902). Devey, Joseph (ed.). Novum Organum. New York: Collier. doi:10.5962/bhl.title.17510.
  83. ^ Brooks, Christopher (1993). "Daniel R. Coquillette. Francis Bacon. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press. 1992. Pp. x, 358. $39.50". Albion. 25 (3): 484–485. doi:10.2307/4050890. ISSN 0095-1390. JSTOR 4050890.
  84. ^ Nisbet, H. B. (1967). "Herder and Francis Bacon". The Modern Language Review. 62 (2): 267–283. doi:10.2307/3723840. ISSN 0026-7937. JSTOR 3723840.
  85. ^ Martin, Julian (1992). Francis Bacon: The State and the Reform of Natural Philosophy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-38249-6.[page needed]
  86. ^ Steel, Byron (1930). "Sir Francis Bacon: The First Modern Mind". Garden City, NY: Doubleday, Doran & Co. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  87. ^ Hundert, EJ. (1987), "Enlightenment and the decay of common sense." In: Frits van Holthoon & David R. Olson (Eds.), Common Sense: The Foundations for Social Science (pp. 133–154). Lanham, MD: University Press of America. p. 136.
  88. ^ Urbach, Peter (1987). Francis Bacon's Philosophy of Science: An Account and a Reappraisal. La Salle, Ill.: Open Court Publishing Co. ISBN 978-0-912050-44-7. p. 192. "Bacon's celebrity as a philosopher of science has sunk since the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries, when he earned the title of 'Father of Experimental Philosophy'".
  89. ^ Bacon, Francis (1 June 2003). History of Life and Death. ISBN 978-0-7661-6272-3.
  90. ^ Hepworth Dixon, William (1862). "The story of Lord Bacon's Life" (1862).
  91. ^ (law). 4. NF, CA: Heritage. 1701. Archived from the original on 21 October 2013. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  92. ^ Bacon, Locke, and Newton. "The Letters of Thomas Jefferson: 1743–1826". Netherlands: RUG. Retrieved 13 June 2009. Bacon, Locke and Newton, whose pictures I will trouble you to have copied for me: and as I consider them as the three greatest men that have ever lived, without any exception, and as having laid the foundation of those superstructures which have been raised in the Physical & Moral sciences {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  93. ^ (essay). UK: FBRT. Archived from the original on 31 January 2012. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  94. ^ Hepworth Dixon, William (1 February 2003). Personal History of Lord Bacon from Unpublished Papers. p. 200. ISBN 978-0-7661-2798-2.
  95. ^ Crowther, J. G. (19 January 1961). "Article about Francis Bacon". New Scientist.
  96. ^ Hepworth Dixon, William (1861). Personal history of Lord Bacon: From unpublished papers. J. Murray. p. 35.
  97. ^ Wheeler, Harvey. Francis Bacon's 'Verulamium': the Common Law Template of The Modern in English Science and Culture
  98. ^ "Sir Francis Bacon" 2 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine. GraysInn.org. Retrieved 21 August 2015
  99. ^ Hanson, Elizabeth (Spring 1991). "Torture and Truth in Renaissance England". Representations. 34: 53–84. doi:10.1525/rep.1991.34.1.99p0046u.
  100. ^ Langbein, John H. (1976). Torture and the Law of Proof. The University of Chicago Press. p. 90.
  101. ^ Frances Yates, Theatre of the World, London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1969
  102. ^ Daphne du Maurier, The Winding Stair, Biography of Bacon 1976.
  103. ^ Frances Yates, The Occult Philosophy in the Elizabethan Age, pp. 61–68, London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1979
  104. ^ a b Frances Yates, The Rosicrucian Enlightenment, London and Boston: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1972
  105. ^ Bacon, Francis. Of the Proficience and Advancement of Learning, Divine and Human
  106. ^ Andreae 1619.
  107. ^ Farrington, Benjamin (1951). Francis Bacon, philosopher of industrial science. New York. ISBN 978-0-374-92706-6.
  108. ^ "Literary criticism of Johann Valentin Andreae". Enotes.com. Retrieved 21 October 2013.
  109. ^ a b Rossi 1968, Chapter 1.
  110. ^ Rossi 1968, Chapter 3.
  111. ^ Josephson-Storm 2017, p. 46.
  112. ^ Josephson-Storm 2017, pp. 50–51.
  113. ^ "The Mastery of Life" (PDF). Rosicrucian.org. p. 31. (PDF) from the original on 6 February 2004. Retrieved 21 October 2013.
  114. ^ Saint Germain Foundation. The History of the "I AM" Activity and Saint Germain Foundation. Schaumburg, Illinois: Saint Germain Press 2003
  115. ^ Luk, A.D.K.. Law of Life – Book II. Pueblo, Colorado: A.D. K. Luk Publications 1989, pp. 254–267
  116. ^ White Paper – Wesak World Congress 2002. Acropolis Sophia Books & Works 2003.
  117. ^ Partridge, Christopher ed. New Religions: A Guide: New Religious Movements, Sects and Alternative Spiritualities Oxford University Press, United States 2004.
  118. ^ Schroeder, Werner Ascended Masters and Their Retreats Ascended Master Teaching Foundation 2004, pp. 250–255
  119. ^ Alban, Francis Bacon, Viscount St (1 January 1620), "Instauratio magna preliminaries", in Rees (ed.), The Oxford Francis Bacon, Vol. 11: The Instauratio magna Part II: Novum organum and Associated Texts, Oxford University Press, pp. 2–495, doi:10.1093/oseo/instance.00007240, ISBN 978-0-19-924792-9

Sources

Primary sources

  • Bacon, Francis. The Essays and Counsels, Civil and Moral of Francis Bacon: all 3 volumes in a single file. B&R Samizdat Express, 2014.
  • Andreae, Johann Valentin (1619). "Christianopolis". Description of the Republic of Christianopolis. New York, Oxford university press, American branch; [etc., etc.]
  • Spedding, James; Ellis, Robert Leslie; Heath, Douglas Denon (1857–1874). The Works of Francis Bacon, Baron of Verulam, Viscount St Albans and Lord High Chancellor of England (15 volumes). London.

Secondary sources

Further reading

  • Agassi, Joseph (2013). The Very Idea of Modern Science: Francis Bacon and Robert Boyle. Springer. ISBN 978-94-007-5350-1.
  • Farrell, John (2006). "6: The Science of Suspicion". Paranoia and Modernity: Cervantes to Rousseau. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0-8014-7406-4.
  • Farrington, Benjamin (1964). The Philosophy of Francis Bacon. University of Chicago Press. Contains English translations of
    • Temporis Partus Masculus
    • Cogitata et Visa
    • Redargutio Philosophiarum
  • Josephson-Storm, Jason (2017). The Myth of Disenchantment: Magic, Modernity, and the Birth of the Human Sciences. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-40336-6.
  • Heese, Mary (1968). "Francis Bacon's Philosophy of Science". In Vickers, Brian (ed.). Essential Articles for the Study of Francis Bacon. Hamden, CT: Archon Books. pp. 114–139. ISBN 9780208006240.
  • Lewis, Rhodri (2014). "Francis Bacon and Ingenuity". Renaissance Quarterly. 67 (1): 113–163. doi:10.1086/676154. JSTOR 10.1086/676154. S2CID 170420555.
  • Roselle, Daniel; Young, Anne P. "5: The 'Scientific Revolution' and the 'Intellectual Revolution'". Our Western Heritage.[full citation needed]
  • Rossi, Paolo (1968). Francis Bacon: from Magic to Science. University of Chicago Press.
  • Serjeantson, Richard. "Francis Bacon and the 'Interpretation of Nature' in the Late Renaissance," Isis (December 2014) 105#4 pp. 681–705.

External links

  • Klein, Juergen. "Francis Bacon". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  • "Francis Bacon". Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  • Works by Francis Bacon at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Francis Bacon at Internet Archive
  • Works by Francis Bacon at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • "Archival material relating to Francis Bacon". UK National Archives.  
  • Contains the New Organon, slightly modified for easier reading
  • Lord Macaulay's essay Lord Bacon (Edinburgh Review, 1837) Lord Bacon
  • Francis Bacon of Verulam. Realistic Philosophy and its Age by Kuno Fischer, translated from the German by John Oxenford London 1857
  • Bacon by Thomas Fowler (1881) public domain at Internet Archive
  • The Francis Bacon Society
  • Six Degrees of Francis Bacon
  • Journals of the Francis Bacon Society from 1886 to 1999
  • English translation of Hugo von Hofmannsthal's fictional The Lord Chandos Letter, addressed to Bacon
  • The George Fabyan Collection at the Library of Congress is rich in the works of Francis Bacon.
  • Francis Bacon Research Trust
  • Sir Francis Bacon's New Advancement of Learning
  • Montmorency, James E. G. (1913). "Francis Bacon". In Macdonell, John; Manson, Edward William Donoghue (eds.). Great Jurists of the World. London: John Murray. pp. 144–168. Retrieved 11 March 2019 – via Internet Archive.
  • Letterbook and correspondence by Sir Francis Bacon at Columbia University. Rare Book & Manuscript Library.
Political offices
Preceded by Attorney General of England and Wales
1613–1617
Succeeded by
Preceded by Lord High Chancellor of England
1617–1621
In commission
Parliament of England
Preceded by
Francis Kinwellmarsh
Robert Doyly
Member of Parliament for Bossiney
1581–1584
With: Robert Redge
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Weymouth and Melcombe Regis
1584–1585
With: Laurence Tomson
George Grenville
Edward Penruddock
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Maurice Horner
William Goldwell
Member of Parliament for Taunton
1586–1588
With: John Goldwell
Succeeded by
Thomas Fisher
John Goldwell
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Liverpool
1588–1593
With: Edward Warren
Succeeded by
Michael Doughty
John Wroth
Preceded by
Robert Wroth
William Fleetwood
Member of Parliament for Middlesex
1593
With: Robert Wroth
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Ipswich
1597–1614
With: Michael Stanhope (1597–1604)
Henry Glemham (1604–1614)
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Nicholas Steward
Henry Mountlow
Member of Parliament for Cambridge University
1614–1621
With: Sir Miles Sandys
Succeeded by

francis, bacon, other, uses, disambiguation, confused, with, roger, bacon, viscount, alban, january, 1561, april, 1626, also, known, lord, verulam, english, philosopher, statesman, served, attorney, general, lord, chancellor, england, bacon, advancement, both,. For other uses see Francis Bacon disambiguation Not to be confused with Roger Bacon Francis Bacon 1st Viscount St Alban a PC QC ˈ b eɪ k en 5 22 January 1561 9 April 1626 also known as Lord Verulam was an English philosopher and statesman who served as Attorney General and Lord Chancellor of England Bacon led the advancement of both natural philosophy and the scientific method and his works remained influential even in the late stages of the Scientific Revolution 6 The Right HonourableThe Viscount St AlbanPCPortrait by Paul van Somer I 1617Lord High Chancellor of EnglandIn office 7 March 1617 3 May 1621 1617 03 07 1621 05 03 MonarchJames IPreceded bySir Thomas EgertonSucceeded byJohn WilliamsAttorney General of England and WalesIn office 26 October 1613 7 March 1617 1613 10 26 1617 03 07 MonarchJames IPreceded bySir Henry HobartSucceeded bySir Henry YelvertonPersonal detailsBornFrancis Bacon 1561 01 22 22 January 1561The Strand London EnglandDied9 April 1626 1626 04 09 aged 65 Highgate Middlesex EnglandResting placeSt Michael s Church St AlbansSpouseAlice Barnham m 1604 wbr ParentsSir Nicholas Bacon father Lady Anne Bacon mother EducationTrinity College Cambridge no degree Gray s Inn call to bar Notable worksWorks by Francis BaconSignaturePhilosophy careerOther namesLord VerulamNotable workNovum OrganumEraRenaissance philosophy17th century philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolEmpiricismMain interestsNatural philosophyPhilosophical logicNotable ideasList Baconian methodIdola foriIdola theatriIdola specusIdola tribusKnowledge is powerSalomon s HouseInfluences Aristotle PlatoInfluenced Basil Montagu Encyclopedistes Isaac Newton John Locke Robert Boyle Thomas Hobbes Thomas Jefferson David Hume Voltaire Jean Jacques RousseauBacon has been called the father of empiricism 7 He argued for the possibility of scientific knowledge based only upon inductive reasoning and careful observation of events in nature He believed that science could be achieved by the use of a sceptical and methodical approach whereby scientists aim to avoid misleading themselves Although his most specific proposals about such a method the Baconian method did not have long lasting influence the general idea of the importance and possibility of a sceptical methodology makes Bacon one of the later founders of the scientific method His portion of the method based in scepticism was a new rhetorical and theoretical framework for science whose practical details are still central to debates on science and methodology He is famous for his role in the scientific revolution begun during the Middle Ages promoting scientific experimentation as a way of glorifying God and fulfilling scripture He was renowned as a politician in Elizabethan England as he held the office of Lord Chancellor Bacon was a patron of libraries and developed a system for cataloguing books under three categories history poetry and philosophy which could further be divided into specific subjects and subheadings About books he wrote Some books are to be tasted others swallowed and some few to be chewed and digested 8 The Shakespearean authorship thesis which was first proposed in the mid 19th century contends that Bacon wrote at least some and possibly all of the plays conventionally attributed to William Shakespeare 9 Bacon was educated at Trinity College at the University of Cambridge where he rigorously followed the medieval curriculum which was presented largely in Latin He was the first recipient of the Queen s counsel designation conferred in 1597 when Elizabeth I reserved him as her legal advisor After the accession of James I in 1603 Bacon was knighted then created Baron Verulam in 1618 2 and Viscount St Alban in 1621 1 b He had no heirs and so both titles became extinct on his death in 1626 at the age of 65 He died of pneumonia with one account by John Aubrey stating that he had contracted it while studying the effects of freezing on meat preservation He is buried at St Michael s Church St Albans Hertfordshire 11 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life and education 1 2 Parliamentarian 1 3 Final years of the Queen s reign 1 4 James I comes to the throne 1 5 Lord Chancellor and public disgrace 1 6 Personal life 1 6 1 Religious beliefs 1 6 2 Marriage to Alice Barnham 1 6 3 Sexuality 1 7 Death 2 Philosophy and works 3 Influence and legacy 3 1 Science 3 2 North America 3 3 Law 3 4 Organization of knowledge 4 Historical debates 4 1 Bacon and Shakespeare 4 2 Occult theories 5 Bibliography 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Sources 9 1 Primary sources 9 2 Secondary sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksBiography EditEarly life and education Edit See also Anne Bacon and Nicholas Bacon Lord Keeper A young Francis Bacon depicted in a National Portrait Gallery painting the inscription around Bacon s head reads Si tabula daretur digna animum mallem Latin for If one could but paint his mind The Italianate entry to York House built around 1626 in Strand the year of Bacon s death Francis Bacon was born on 22 January 1561 at York House near Strand in London the son of Sir Nicholas Bacon Lord Keeper of the Great Seal by his second wife Anne Cooke Bacon the daughter of the noted Renaissance humanist Anthony Cooke His mother s sister was married to William Cecil 1st Baron Burghley making Burghley Bacon s uncle 12 Biographers believe that Bacon was educated at home in his early years owing to poor health which would plague him throughout his life He received tuition from John Walsall a graduate of Oxford with a strong leaning toward Puritanism He attended Trinity College at the University of Cambridge on 5 April 1573 at the age of 12 13 living there for three years along with his older brother Anthony Bacon under the personal tutelage of Dr John Whitgift future Archbishop of Canterbury Bacon s education was conducted largely in Latin and followed the medieval curriculum It was at Cambridge that Bacon first met Queen Elizabeth who was impressed by his precocious intellect and was accustomed to calling him The young lord keeper 14 His studies brought him to the belief that the methods and results of science as then practised were erroneous His reverence for Aristotle conflicted with his rejection of Aristotelian philosophy which seemed to him barren argumentative and wrong in its objectives On 27 June 1576 he and Anthony entered de societate magistrorum at Gray s Inn A few months later Francis went abroad with Sir Amias Paulet the English ambassador at Paris while Anthony continued his studies at home The state of government and society in France under Henry III afforded him valuable political instruction 15 For the next three years he visited Blois Poitiers Tours Italy and Spain 16 There is no evidence that he studied at the University of Poitiers 17 During his travels Bacon studied language statecraft and civil law while performing routine diplomatic tasks On at least one occasion he delivered diplomatic letters to England for Walsingham Burghley Leicester and for the queen 16 The sudden death of his father in February 1579 prompted Bacon to return to England Sir Nicholas had laid up a considerable sum of money to purchase an estate for his youngest son but he died before doing so and Francis was left with only a fifth of that money 15 Having borrowed money Bacon got into debt To support himself he took up his residence in law at Gray s Inn in 1579 15 his income being supplemented by a grant from his mother Lady Anne of the manor of Marks near Romford in Essex which generated a rent of 46 18 Parliamentarian Edit Bacon s statue at Gray s Inn in London s South Square Bacon stated that he had three goals to uncover truth to serve his country and to serve his church He sought to achieve these goals by seeking a prestigious post In 1580 through his uncle Lord Burghley he applied for a post at court that might enable him to pursue a life of learning but his application failed For two years he worked quietly at Gray s Inn until he was admitted as an outer barrister in 1582 19 His parliamentary career began when he was elected MP for Bossiney Cornwall in a by election in 1581 In 1584 he took his seat in Parliament for Melcombe in Dorset and in 1586 for Taunton At this time he began to write on the condition of parties in the church as well as on the topic of philosophical reform in the lost tract Temporis Partus Maximus Yet he failed to gain a position that he thought would lead him to success 15 He showed signs of sympathy to Puritanism attending the sermons of the Puritan chaplain of Gray s Inn and accompanying his mother to the Temple Church to hear Walter Travers This led to the publication of his earliest surviving tract which criticized the English church s suppression of the Puritan clergy In the Parliament of 1586 he openly urged execution for the Catholic Mary Queen of Scots 20 About this time he again approached his powerful uncle for help this move was followed by his rapid progress at the bar He became a bencher in 1586 and was elected a Reader in 1587 delivering his first set of lectures in Lent the following year In 1589 he received the valuable appointment of reversion to the Clerkship of the Star Chamber although he did not formally take office until 1608 the post was worth 1 600 a year 15 1 In 1588 he became MP for Liverpool and then for Middlesex in 1593 He later sat three times for Ipswich 1597 1601 1604 and once for Cambridge University 1614 21 He became known as a liberal minded reformer eager to amend and simplify the law Though a friend of the crown he opposed feudal privileges and dictatorial powers He spoke against religious persecution He struck at the House of Lords in its usurpation of the Money Bills He advocated for the union of England and Scotland which made him a significant influence toward the consolidation of the United Kingdom and he later would advocate for the integration of Ireland into the Union Closer constitutional ties he believed would bring greater peace and strength to these countries 22 23 Final years of the Queen s reign Edit Memorial to Bacon in the chapel of Trinity College Cambridge Bacon soon became acquainted with Robert Devereux the 2nd Earl of Essex Queen Elizabeth s favourite 24 By 1591 he acted as the earl s confidential adviser 15 24 In 1592 he was commissioned to write a tract in response to the Jesuit Robert Parson s anti government polemic which he titled Certain Observations Made upon a Libel identifying England with the ideals of democratic Athens against the belligerence of Spain 25 Bacon took his third parliamentary seat for Middlesex when in February 1593 Elizabeth summoned Parliament to investigate a Roman Catholic plot against her Bacon s opposition to a bill that would levy triple subsidies in half the usual time offended the Queen opponents accused him of seeking popularity and for a time the Court excluded him from favour 26 When the office of Attorney General fell vacant in 1594 Lord Essex s influence was not enough to secure the position for Bacon and it was given to Sir Edward Coke Likewise Bacon failed to secure the lesser office of Solicitor General in 1595 the Queen pointedly snubbing him by appointing Sir Thomas Fleming instead 1 To console him for these disappointments Essex presented him with a property at Twickenham which Bacon subsequently sold for 1 800 27 In 1597 Bacon became the first Queen s Counsel designate when Queen Elizabeth reserved him as her legal counsel 28 In 1597 he was also given a patent giving him precedence at the Bar 29 Despite his designations he was unable to gain the status and notoriety of others In a plan to revive his position he unsuccessfully courted the wealthy young widow Lady Elizabeth Hatton 30 His courtship failed after she broke off their relationship upon accepting marriage to Sir Edward Coke a further spark of enmity between the men 31 In 1598 Bacon was arrested for debt Afterward however his standing in the Queen s eyes improved Gradually Bacon earned the standing of one of the learned counsels 32 His relationship with the Queen further improved when he severed ties with Essex a shrewd move as Essex would be executed for treason in 1601 33 With others Bacon was appointed to investigate the charges against Essex A number of Essex s followers confessed that Essex had planned a rebellion against the Queen 34 Bacon was subsequently a part of the legal team headed by the Attorney General Sir Edward Coke at Essex s treason trial 34 After the execution the Queen ordered Bacon to write the official government account of the trial which was later published as A DECLARATION of the Practices and Treasons attempted and committed by Robert late Earle of Essex and his Complices against her Majestie and her Kingdoms after Bacon s first draft was heavily edited by the Queen and her ministers 35 36 According to his personal secretary and chaplain William Rawley as a judge Bacon was always tender hearted looking upon the examples with the eye of severity but upon the person with the eye of pity and compassion And also that he was free from malice no revenger of injuries and no defamer of any man 37 James I comes to the throne Edit Bacon c 1618 The succession of James I brought Bacon into greater favour He was knighted in 1603 In another shrewd move Bacon wrote his Apologies in defense of his proceedings in the case of Essex as Essex had favoured James to succeed to the throne The following year during the course of the uneventful first parliament session Bacon married Alice Barnham 38 In June 1607 he was at last rewarded with the office of solicitor general 1 and in 1608 he began working as the Clerkship of the Star Chamber Despite a generous income old debts still could not be paid He sought further promotion and wealth by supporting King James and his arbitrary policies In 1610 the fourth session of James s first parliament met Despite Bacon s advice to him James and the Commons found themselves at odds over royal prerogatives and the king s embarrassing extravagance The House was finally dissolved in February 1611 Throughout this period Bacon managed to stay in the favor of the king while retaining the confidence of the Commons In 1613 Bacon was finally appointed attorney general after advising the king to shuffle judicial appointments As attorney general Bacon by his zealous efforts which included torture to obtain the conviction of Edmund Peacham for treason raised legal controversies of high constitutional importance 39 and successfully prosecuted Robert Carr 1st Earl of Somerset and his wife Frances Howard Countess of Somerset for murder in 1616 The so called Prince s Parliament of April 1614 objected to Bacon s presence in the seat for Cambridge and to the various royal plans that Bacon had supported Although he was allowed to stay parliament passed a law that forbade the attorney general to sit in parliament His influence over the king had evidently inspired resentment or apprehension in many of his peers Bacon however continued to receive the King s favour which led to his appointment in March 1617 as temporary Regent of England for a period of a month and in 1618 as Lord Chancellor On 12 July 1618 the king created Bacon Baron Verulam of Verulam in the Peerage of England he then became known as Francis Lord Verulam 1 Bacon continued to use his influence with the king to mediate between the throne and Parliament and in this capacity he was further elevated in the same peerage as Viscount St Alban on 27 January 1621 citation needed Lord Chancellor and public disgrace Edit Bacon and members of Parliament on the day of his 1621 political fall Bacon s public career ended in disgrace in 1621 After he fell into debt a parliamentary committee on the administration of the law charged him with 23 separate counts of corruption His lifelong enemy Sir Edward Coke who had instigated these accusations 40 was one of those appointed to prepare the charges against the chancellor 41 To the lords who sent a committee to enquire whether a confession was really his he replied My lords it is my act my hand and my heart I beseech your lordships to be merciful to a broken reed He was sentenced to a fine of 40 000 and committed to the Tower of London at the king s pleasure the imprisonment lasted only a few days and the fine was remitted by the king 42 More seriously parliament declared Bacon incapable of holding future office or sitting in parliament He narrowly escaped undergoing degradation which would have stripped him of his titles of nobility Subsequently the disgraced viscount devoted himself to study and writing There seems little doubt that Bacon had accepted gifts from litigants but this was an accepted custom of the time and not necessarily evidence of deeply corrupt behaviour 43 While acknowledging that his conduct had been lax he countered that he had never allowed gifts to influence his judgement and indeed he had on occasion given a verdict against those who had paid him He even had an interview with King James in which he assured The law of nature teaches me to speak in my own defence With respect to this charge of bribery I am as innocent as any man born on St Innocents Day I never had a bribe or reward in my eye or thought when pronouncing judgment or order I am ready to make an oblation of myself to the King 17 April 1621 44 He also wrote the following to Buckingham My mind is calm for my fortune is not my felicity I know I have clean hands and a clean heart and I hope a clean house for friends or servants but Job himself or whoever was the justest judge by such hunting for matters against him as hath been used against me may for a time seem foul especially in a time when greatness is the mark and accusation is the game 45 As the conduct of accepting gifts was ubiquitous and common practice and the Commons was zealously inquiring into judicial corruption and malfeasance it has been suggested that Bacon served as a scapegoat to divert attention from Buckingham s own ill practice and alleged corruption 46 The true reason for his acknowledgement of guilt is the subject of debate but some authors speculate that it may have been prompted by his sickness or by a view that through his fame and the greatness of his office he would be spared harsh punishment He may even have been blackmailed with a threat to charge him with sodomy into confession 43 47 The British jurist Basil Montagu wrote in Bacon s defense concerning the episode of his public disgrace Bacon has been accused of servility of dissimulation of various base motives and their filthy brood of base actions all unworthy of his high birth and incompatible with his great wisdom and the estimation in which he was held by the noblest spirits of the age It is true that there were men in his own time and will be men in all times who are better pleased to count spots in the sun than to rejoice in its glorious brightness Such men have openly libelled him like Dewes and Weldon whose falsehoods were detected as soon as uttered or have fastened upon certain ceremonious compliments and dedications the fashion of his day as a sample of his servility passing over his noble letters to the Queen his lofty contempt for the Lord Keeper Puckering his open dealing with Sir Robert Cecil and with others who powerful when he was nothing might have blighted his opening fortunes for ever forgetting his advocacy of the rights of the people in the face of the court and the true and honest counsels always given by him in times of great difficulty both to Elizabeth and her successor When was a base sycophant loved and honoured by piety such as that of Herbert Tennison and Rawley by noble spirits like Hobbes Ben Jonson and Selden or followed to the grave and beyond it with devoted affection such as that of Sir Thomas Meautys 48 Personal life Edit Religious beliefs Edit Bacon was a devout Anglican He believed that philosophy and the natural world must be studied inductively but argued that we can only study arguments for the existence of God Information about God s attributes such as nature action and purposes can only come from special revelation Bacon also held that knowledge was cumulative that study encompassed more than a simple preservation of the past Knowledge is the rich storehouse for the glory of the Creator and the relief of man s estate he wrote In his Essays he affirms that a little philosophy inclineth man s mind to atheism but depth in philosophy bringeth men s minds about to religion 49 Bacon s idea of idols of the mind may have self consciously represented an attempt to Christianize science at the same time as developing a new reliable scientific method Bacon gave worship of Neptune as an example of the idola tribus fallacy hinting at the religious dimensions of his critique of the idols 50 Bacon was against the splintering within Christianity believing that it would ultimately lead to the creation of atheism as a dominant worldview as indicated with his quote that The causes of atheism are divisions in religion if they be many for any one main division addeth zeal to both sides but many divisions introduce atheism 51 Marriage to Alice Barnham Edit See also Alice Barnham Engraving of Alice Barnham When he was 36 Bacon courted Elizabeth Hatton a young widow of 20 Reportedly she broke off their relationship upon accepting marriage to a wealthier man Bacon s rival Sir Edward Coke Years later Bacon still wrote of his regret that the marriage to Hatton had not taken place 52 At the age of 45 Bacon married Alice Barnham the 13 year old daughter of a well connected London alderman and MP Bacon wrote two sonnets proclaiming his love for Alice The first was written during his courtship and the second on his wedding day 10 May 1606 When Bacon was appointed lord chancellor by special Warrant of the King Lady Bacon was given precedence over all other Court ladies Bacon s personal secretary and chaplain William Rawley wrote in his biography of Bacon that his marriage was one of much conjugal love and respect mentioning a robe of honour that he gave to Alice and which she wore unto her dying day being twenty years and more after his death 37 However an increasing number of reports circulated about friction in the marriage with speculation that this may have been due to Alice s making do with less money than she had once been accustomed to It was said that she was strongly interested in fame and fortune and when household finances dwindled she complained bitterly Bunten wrote in her Life of Alice Barnham 53 that upon their descent into debt she went on trips to ask for financial favours and assistance from their circle of friends Bacon disinherited her upon discovering her secret romantic relationship with Sir John Underhill rewriting his will which had generously planned to leave her lands goods and income and revoking her entirely as a beneficiary Sexuality Edit Several authors believe that despite his marriage Bacon was primarily attracted to men 54 55 Forker 56 for example has explored the historically documentable sexual preferences of both Francis Bacon and King James I and concluded they were both oriented to masculine love a contemporary term that seems to have been used exclusively to refer to the sexual preference of men for members of their own gender 57 The well connected antiquary John Aubrey noted in his Brief Lives concerning Bacon He was a Pederast His Ganimeds and Favourites tooke Bribes 58 Pederast in Renaissance diction meant generally homosexual rather than specifically a lover of minors citation needed ganimed derives from the mythical prince abducted by Zeus to be his cup bearer and bed warmer The Jacobean antiquarian Sir Simonds D Ewes Bacon s fellow Member of Parliament implied there had been a question of bringing him to trial for buggery 59 which his brother Anthony Bacon had also been charged with 60 In his Autobiography and Correspondence in the diary entry for 3 May 1621 the date of Bacon s censure by Parliament D Ewes describes Bacon s love for his Welsh serving men in particular Godrick a very effeminate faced youth whom he calls his catamite and bedfellow 61 This conclusion has been disputed by others who point to lack of consistent evidence and consider the sources to be more open to interpretation 34 62 63 64 65 Publicly at least Bacon distanced himself from the idea of homosexuality In his New Atlantis he described his utopian island as being the chastest nation under heaven and as for masculine love they have no touch of it 66 Death Edit Monument to Bacon at his burial place in St Michael s Church in St AlbansOn 9 April 1626 Francis Bacon died of pneumonia while at Arundel mansion at Highgate outside London 67 An influential account of the circumstances of his death was given by John Aubrey s Brief Lives 67 Aubrey s vivid account which portrays Bacon as a martyr to experimental scientific method had him journeying to High gate through the snow with the King s physician when he is suddenly inspired by the possibility of using the snow to preserve meat They were resolved they would try the experiment presently They alighted out of the coach and went into a poor woman s house at the bottom of Highgate hill and bought a fowl and made the woman exenterate it After stuffing the fowl with snow Bacon contracted a fatal case of pneumonia Some people including Aubrey consider these two contiguous possibly coincidental events as related and causative of his death The Snow so chilled him that he immediately fell so extremely ill that he could not return to his Lodging but went to the Earle of Arundel s house at Highgate where they put him into a damp bed that had not been layn in which gave him such a cold that in 2 or 3 days as I remember Mr Hobbes told me he died of Suffocation 68 Aubrey has been criticized for his evident credulousness in this and other works on the other hand he knew Thomas Hobbes Bacon s fellow philosopher and friend Being unwittingly on his deathbed the philosopher dictated his last letter to his absent host and friend Lord Arundel My very good Lord I was likely to have had the fortune of Caius Plinius the elder who lost his life by trying an experiment about the burning of Mount Vesuvius for I was also desirous to try an experiment or two touching the conservation and in duration of bodies As for the experiment itself it succeeded excellently well but in the journey between London and High gate I was taken with such a fit of casting as I know not whether it were the Stone or some surfeit or cold or indeed a touch of them all three But when I came to your Lordship s House I was not able to go back and therefore was forced to take up my lodging here where your housekeeper is very careful and diligent about me which I assure myself your Lordship will not only pardon towards him but think the better of him for it For indeed your Lordship s House was happy to me and I kiss your noble hands for the welcome which I am sure you give me to it I know how unfit it is for me to write with any other hand than mine own but by my troth my fingers are so disjointed with sickness that I cannot steadily hold a pen 69 Another account appears in a biography by William Rawley Bacon s personal secretary and chaplain He died on the ninth day of April in the year 1626 in the early morning of the day then celebrated for our Savior s resurrection in the sixty sixth year of his age at the Earl of Arundel s house in Highgate near London to which place he casually repaired about a week before God so ordaining that he should die there of a gentle fever accidentally accompanied with a great cold whereby the defluxion of rheum fell so plentifully upon his breast that he died by suffocation 70 He was buried in St Michael s church in St Albans At the news of his death over 30 great minds collected together their eulogies of him which were then later published in Latin 71 He left personal assets of about 7 000 and lands that realised 6 000 when sold 72 His debts amounted to more than 23 000 equivalent to more than 4m at current value 72 73 Philosophy and works EditMain article Works by Francis Bacon Sylva sylvarum Bacon s history of ten centuries Front page of a 1651 copy of Sylva sylvarum Francis Bacon s philosophy is displayed in the vast and varied writings he left which might be divided into three great branches Scientific works in which his ideas for a universal reform of knowledge into scientific methodology and the improvement of mankind s state using the Scientific method are presented 74 page needed 75 76 Religious and literary works in which he presents his moral philosophy and theological meditations c 79 Juridical works in which his reforms in English Law are proposed 80 Influence and legacy EditScience Edit See also Baconian method and Idola fori Statue of Bacon in the Library of Congress in Washington D C National Portrait Gallery painting of the front cover of The History of Royal Society of London picturing Bacon right among the founding influences of Royal Society Bacon s seminal work Novum Organum was influential in the 1630s and 1650s among scholars in particular Sir Thomas Browne who in his encyclopedia Pseudodoxia Epidemica 1646 72 frequently adheres to a Baconian approach to his scientific enquiries This book entails the basis of the scientific method as a means of observation and induction According to Bacon learning and knowledge all derive from the basis of inductive reasoning Through his belief in experimental encounters he theorised that all the knowledge that was necessary to fully understand a concept could be attained using induction In order to get to the point of an inductive conclusion one must consider the importance of observing the particulars specific parts of nature Once these particulars have been gathered together the interpretation of Nature proceeds by sorting them into a formal arrangement so that they may be presented to the understanding 81 Experimentation is essential to discovering the truths of Nature When an experiment happens parts of the tested hypothesis are started to be pieced together forming a result and conclusion Through this conclusion of particulars an understanding of Nature can be formed Now that an understanding of Nature has been arrived at an inductive conclusion can be drawn For no one successfully investigates the nature of a thing in the thing itself the inquiry must be enlarged to things that have more in common with it 82 Bacon explains how we come to this understanding and knowledge because of this process in comprehending the complexities of nature Bacon sees nature as an extremely subtle complexity which affords all the energy of the natural philosopher to disclose her secrets 83 Bacon described the evidence and proof revealed through taking a specific example from nature and expanding that example into a general substantial claim of nature Once we understand the particulars in nature we can learn more about it and become surer of things occurring in nature gaining knowledge and obtaining new information all the while It is nothing less than a revival of Bacon s supremely confident belief that inductive methods can provide us with ultimate and infallible answers concerning the laws and nature of the universe 84 Bacon states that when we come to understand parts of nature we can eventually understand nature better as a whole because of induction Because of this Bacon concludes that all learning and knowledge must be drawn from inductive reasoning During the Restoration Bacon was commonly invoked as a guiding spirit of the Royal Society founded under Charles II in 1660 85 86 During the 18th century French Enlightenment Bacon s non metaphysical approach to science became more influential than the dualism of his French contemporary Descartes and was associated with criticism of the Ancien Regime In 1733 Voltaire introduced him to a French audience as the father of the scientific method an understanding which had become widespread by the 1750s 87 In the 19th century his emphasis on induction was revived and developed by William Whewell among others He has been reputed as the Father of Experimental Philosophy 88 He also wrote a long treatise on Medicine History of Life and Death 89 with natural and experimental observations for the prolongation of life One of his biographers the historian William Hepworth Dixon states Bacon s influence in the modern world is so great that every man who rides in a train sends a telegram follows a steam plough sits in an easy chair crosses the channel or the Atlantic eats a good dinner enjoys a beautiful garden or undergoes a painless surgical operation owes him something 90 In 1902 Hugo von Hofmannsthal published a fictional letter known as The Lord Chandos Letter addressed to Bacon and dated 1603 about a writer who is experiencing a crisis of language North America Edit A Newfoundland stamp which reads Lord Bacon the guiding spirit in colonization scheme Bacon played a leading role in establishing the British colonies in North America especially in Virginia the Carolinas and Newfoundland in northeastern Canada His government report on The Virginia Colony was submitted in 1609 In 1610 Bacon and his associates received a charter from the king to form the Tresurer and the Companye of Adventurers and planter of the Cittye of London and Bristoll for the Collonye or plantacon in Newfoundland and sent John Guy to found a colony there 91 Thomas Jefferson the third President of the United States wrote Bacon Locke and Newton I consider them as the three greatest men that have ever lived without any exception and as having laid the foundation of those superstructures which have been raised in the Physical and Moral sciences 92 In 1910 Newfoundland issued a postage stamp to commemorate Bacon s role in establishing the colony The stamp describes Bacon as the guiding spirit in Colonization Schemes in 1610 52 Moreover some scholars believe he was largely responsible for the drafting in 1609 and 1612 of two charters of government for the Virginia Colony 93 William Hepworth Dixon considered that Bacon s name could be included in the list of Founders of the United States 94 Law Edit Although few of his proposals for law reform were adopted during his lifetime Bacon s legal legacy was considered by the magazine New Scientist in 1961 as having influenced the drafting of the Napoleonic Code as well as the law reforms introduced by 19th century British Prime Minister Sir Robert Peel 95 The historian William Hepworth Dixon referred to the Napoleonic Code as the sole embodiment of Bacon s thought saying that Bacon s legal work has had more success abroad than it has found at home and that in France it has blossomed and come into fruit 96 Harvey Wheeler attributed to Bacon in Francis Bacon s Verulamium the Common Law Template of The Modern in English Science and Culture the creation of these distinguishing features of the modern common law system using cases as repositories of evidence about the unwritten law determining the relevance of precedents by exclusionary principles of evidence and logic treating opposing legal briefs as adversarial hypotheses about the application of the unwritten law to a new set of facts As late as the 18th century some juries still declared the law rather than the facts but already before the end of the 17th century Sir Matthew Hale explained modern common law adjudication procedure and acknowledged Bacon as the inventor of the process of discovering unwritten laws from the evidences of their applications The method combined empiricism and inductivism in a new way that was to imprint its signature on many of the distinctive features of modern English society 97 Paul H Kocher writes that Bacon is considered by some jurists to be the father of modern Jurisprudence 80 Bacon is commemorated with a statue in Gray s Inn South Square in London where he received his legal training and where he was elected Treasurer of the Inn in 1608 98 More recent scholarship on Bacon s jurisprudence has focused on his advocating torture as a legal recourse for the crown 99 Bacon himself was not a stranger to the torture chamber in his various legal capacities in both Elizabeth I s and James I s reigns Bacon was listed as a commissioner on five torture warrants In 1613 in a letter addressed to King James I on the question of torture s place within English law Bacon identifies the scope of torture as a means to further the investigation of threats to the state In the cases of treasons torture is used for discovery and not for evidence 100 For Bacon torture was not a punitive measure an intended form of state repression but instead offered a modus operandi for the government agent tasked with uncovering acts of treason Organization of knowledge Edit Francis Bacon developed the idea that a classification of knowledge must be universal while handling all possible resources In his progressive view humanity would be better if access to educational resources were provided to the public hence the need to organise it His approach to learning reshaped the Western view of knowledge theory from an individual to a social interest The original classification proposed by Bacon organised all types of knowledge into three general groups history poetry and philosophy He did that based on his understanding of how information is processed memory imagination and reason respectively His methodical approach to the categorization of knowledge goes hand in hand with his principles of scientific methods Bacon s writings were the starting point for William Torrey Harris s classification system for libraries in the United States by the second half of the 1800s The phrase scientia potentia est or scientia est potentia meaning knowledge is power is commonly attributed to Bacon the expression ipsa scientia potestas est knowledge itself is power occurs in his Meditationes Sacrae 1597 Historical debates EditBacon and Shakespeare Edit Main articles Bacon s cipher and Baconian theory of Shakespeare authorship See also Prince Tudor theory The Baconian hypothesis of Shakespearean authorship first proposed in the mid 19th century contends that Francis Bacon wrote some or even all of the plays conventionally attributed to William Shakespeare 9 Occult theories Edit Main article Occult theories about Francis Bacon See also Idola theatri An old volume of Bacon and a rose Francis Bacon often gathered with the men at Gray s Inn to discuss politics and philosophy and to try out various theatrical scenes that he admitted writing 101 Bacon s alleged connection to the Rosicrucians and the Freemasons has been widely discussed by authors and scholars in many books 63 However others including Daphne du Maurier in her biography of Bacon have argued that there is no substantive evidence to support claims of involvement with the Rosicrucians 102 Frances Yates 103 does not make the claim that Bacon was a Rosicrucian but presents evidence that he was nevertheless involved in some of the more closed intellectual movements of his day She argues that Bacon s movement for the advancement of learning was closely connected with the German Rosicrucian movement while Bacon s New Atlantis portrays a land ruled by Rosicrucians He apparently saw his own movement for the advancement of learning to be in conformity with Rosicrucian ideals 104 The link between Bacon s work and the Rosicrucians ideals which Yates allegedly found was the conformity of the purposes expressed by the Rosicrucian Manifestos and Bacon s plan of a Great Instauration 104 for the two were calling for a reformation of both divine and human understanding d 105 as well as both had in view the purpose of mankind s return to the state before the Fall e f Another major link is said to be the resemblance between Bacon s New Atlantis and the German Rosicrucian Johann Valentin Andreae s Description of the Republic of Christianopolis 1619 106 Andreae describes a utopic island in which Christian theosophy and applied science ruled and in which the spiritual fulfilment and intellectual activity constituted the primary goals of each individual the scientific pursuits being the highest intellectual calling linked to the achievement of spiritual perfection Andreae s island also depicts a great advancement in technology with many industries separated in different zones which supplied the population s needs which shows great resemblance to Bacon s scientific methods and purposes 107 108 While rejecting occult conspiracy theories surrounding Bacon and the claim Bacon personally identified as a Rosicrucian intellectual historian Paolo Rossi has argued for an occult influence on Bacon s scientific and religious writing He argues that Bacon was familiar with early modern alchemical texts and that Bacon s ideas about the application of science had roots in Renaissance magical ideas about science and magic facilitating humanity s domination of nature 109 Rossi further interprets Bacon s search for hidden meanings in myth and fables in such texts as The Wisdom of the Ancients as succeeding earlier occultist and Neoplatonic attempts to locate hidden wisdom in pre Christian myths 110 As indicated by the title of his study however Rossi claims Bacon ultimately rejected the philosophical foundations of occultism as he came to develop a form of modern science 109 Rossi s analysis and claims have been extended by Jason Josephson Storm in his study The Myth of Disenchantment Josephson Storm also rejects conspiracy theories surrounding Bacon and does not make the claim that Bacon was an active Rosicrucian However he argues that Bacon s rejection of magic actually constituted an attempt to purify magic of Catholic demonic and esoteric influences and to establish magic as a field of study and application paralleling Bacon s vision of science Furthermore Josephson Storm argues that Bacon drew on magical ideas when developing his experimental method 111 Josephson Storm finds evidence that Bacon considered nature a living entity populated by spirits and argues Bacon s views on the human domination and application of nature actually depend on his spiritualism and personification of nature 112 The Rosicrucian organization AMORC claims that Bacon was the Imperator leader of the Rosicrucian Order in both England and the European continent and would have directed it during his lifetime 113 Bacon s influence can also be seen on a variety of religious and spiritual authors and on groups that have utilized his writings in their own belief systems 114 115 116 117 118 Bibliography EditMain article Francis Bacon bibliography See also Essays Francis Bacon History of the Reign of King Henry VII New Atlantis Novum Organum Salomon s House and The Advancement of Learning Front page of a 1779 copy of Bacon s Novum Organum authored in 1620 Some of the more notable works by Bacon are Essays 1st edition with 10 essays 1597 2nd edition with 38 essays 1612 3rd final edition with 58 essays 1625 The Advancement and Proficience of Learning Divine and Human 1605 Instauratio magna The Great Instauration 1620 a multi part work including Distributio operis Plan of the Work Novum Organum The New Organon Parasceve ad historiam naturalem Preparatory for Natural History and Catalogus historiarum particularium Catalogue of Particular Histories 119 De augmentis scientiarum 1623 an enlargement of The Advancement of Learning translated into Latin New Atlantis 1626 See also EditCestui que defence and comment on Chudleigh s Case Romanticism and Bacon Scientia potentia est Works by Francis BaconNotes Edit There is confusion over the spelling of Bacon s title Some sources such as the 2007 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography and the 9th edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica spell it St Alban 1 2 others such as the Dictionary of National Biography 1885 and the 11th edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica spell the title St Albans 3 4 Contemporary spelling used by Bacon himself in his letter of thanks to the king for his elevation 10 Ben son Salem peace peaceful or at peace 77 78 Howbeit we know after a time there wil now be a general reformation both of divine and humane things according to our desire and the expectation of others for it s fitting that before the rising of the Sun there should appear and break forth Aurora or some clearness or divine light in the sky Fama Fraternitatis sacred texts com Archived 14 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine Like good and faithful guardians we may yield up their fortune to mankind upon the emancipation and majority of their understanding from which must necessarily follow an improvement of their estate For man by the fall fell at the same time from his state of innocency and from his dominion over creation Both of these losses however can even in this life be in some part repaired the former by religion and faith the latter by arts and sciences Francis Bacon Novum Organum We ought therefore here to observe well and make it known unto everyone that God hath certainly and most assuredly concluded to send and grant to the whole world before her end such a truth light life and glory as the first man Adam had which he lost in Paradise after which his successors were put and driven with him to misery Wherefore there shall cease all servitude falsehood lies and darkness which by little and little with the great world s revolution was crept into all arts works and governments of men and have darkened most part of them Confessio FraternitatisReferences Edit a b c d e f Peltonen 2007 a b Adamson 1878 p 200 Fowler 1885 p 346 Adamson amp Mitchell 1911 p 135 Bacon Archived 15 June 2018 at the Wayback Machine entry in Collins English Dictionary Klein Jurgen 2012 Francis Bacon in Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Winter 2016 ed Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University retrieved 17 January 2020 Empiricism The influence of Francis Bacon John Locke and David Hume Sweet Briar College Archived from the original on 8 July 2013 Retrieved 21 October 2013 Murray Stuart 2009 The library an illustrated history Nicholas A Basbanes American Library Association New York New York ISBN 978 1 60239 706 4 OCLC 277203534 a b Dobson Michael 2001 The Oxford Companion to Shakespeare Oxford University Press p 33 Birch Thomas 1763 Letters Speeches Charges Advices amp c of Lord Chancellor Bacon Vol 6 London Andrew Millar pp 271 272 OCLC 228676038 Scott Wilson Resting Places The Burial Sites of More Than 14 000 Famous Persons 3rd ed 2 Kindle Locations 2105 2106 McFarland amp Company Inc Publishers Kindle Edition Pollard 1911 p 816 Bacon Francis BCN573F A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge Collins Arthur 1741 The English Baronetage Containing a Genealogical and Historical Account of All the English Baronets Now Existing Their Descents Marriages and Issues Memorable Actions Both in War and Peace Religious and Charitable Donations Deaths Places of Burial and Monumental Inscriptions Printed for Tho Wotton at the Three Daggers and Queen s Head p 5 a b c d e f Adamson amp Mitchell 1911 p 136 a b Stephen Gaukroger 2001 Francis Bacon and the Transformation of Early Modern Philosophy Cambridge University Press p 46 Francis Bacon The Advancement of Learning Clarendon Press 1876 p ix Spall JEH 1971 Francis Bacon s connections with Marks Manor House Romford Record Romford Romford and District Historical Society No 4 32 37 Ellis Robert P 27 April 2015 Francis Bacon The Double Edged Life of the Philosopher and Statesman McFarland p 28 Jardine L 1986 Francis Bacon Discovery and the Art of Discourse Cambridge University Press History of Parliament Retrieved 2 October 2011 Spedding James 1861 The letters and life of Francis Bacon a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Sir Francis Bacon s Letters Tracts and Speech relating to Ireland Archived from the original on 7 August 2011 Retrieved 24 January 2013 a b Paul E J Hammer 1999 The Polarisation of Elizabethan Politics The Political Career of Robert Devereux 2nd Earl of Essex 1585 1597 p 141 Cambridge University Press Gustav Ungerer 1974 A Spaniard in Elizabethan England The Correspondence of Antonio Perez s Exile Volume 1 p 207 Tamesis Books Weir Alison Elizabeth the Queen Pimlico 1999 p 414 Bunten Alice Chambers Twickenham Park and Old Richmond Palace and Francis Bacon Lord Verulam s Connection with The 1580 1608 R Banks p 19 Holdsworth W S 1938 History of English Law pp vi 473 474 Patent Rolls 2 Jac I p 12 m 10 Longueville Thomas 1909 The Curious Case of Lady Purbeck A Scandal of the XVIIth Century London Longmans Green and Co p 4 Aughterson Kate Hatton Elizabeth Lady Hatton nee Lady Elizabeth Cecil 1578 1646 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography via Oxford University Press Adamson amp Mitchell 1911 p 137 Britannica Concise Encyclopedia Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc 2008 p 636 a b c Nieves Matthews Francis Bacon The History of a Character Assassination Yale University Press 1996 Adamson amp Mitchell 1911 p 138 Matthews 1996 56 57 a b Rawley William 1670 The Life of the Right Honorable Francis Bacon Baron of Verulam Viscount St Alban London Thomas Johns Archived from the original on 5 August 2019 Retrieved 4 February 2012 Adamson amp Mitchell 1911 p 139 Lee Sidney 1895 Peachem Edmond The Dictionary of National Biography Vol 44 Smith Elder amp Co Ousby Ian 1996 The Cambridge Paperback Guide to Literature in English Cambridge University Press p 22 ISBN 978 0 521 43627 4 Zagorin Perez 1999 Francis Bacon Princeton University Press p 22 ISBN 978 0 691 00966 7 Parris Matthew Maguire Kevin 2004 Francis Bacon 1621 Great Parliamentary Scandals London Chrysalis pp 8 9 ISBN 978 1 86105 736 5 a b Zagorin Perez 1999 Francis Bacon Princeton NJ Princeton University Press pp 22 23 ISBN 978 0 691 00966 7 Campbell John Baron Campbell 1818 J Murray The Lives of the Lord Chancellors and Keepers of the Great Seal of England Fowler 1885 p 347 Express Britain The Duke of Buckingham and Sir Francis Bacon Britain Express Retrieved 31 October 2022 A L Rowse quoted in Parris Maguire 2004 8 a charge of sodomy was to be brought against the sixty year old Lord Chancellor Montagu Basil 1837 Essays and Selections pp 325 326 ISBN 978 1 4368 3777 4 Bacon Francis 1625 The Essayes Or Covnsels Civill and Morall of Francis Lo Vervlam Viscovnt St Alban London p 90 Retrieved 7 July 2019 Josephson Storm 2017 pp 48 49 Bacon Francis 1909 1914 Bartelby com Essays Civil and Moral The Harvard Classics Vol III Part 1 ed New York PF Collier and Son a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a Check url value help a b Alfred Dodd Francis Bacon s Personal Life Story Volume 2 The Age of James England Rider amp Co 1949 1986 pp 157 158 425 502 503 518 532 Alice Chambers Bunten Life of Alice Barnham Wife of Sir Francis Bacon London Oliphants Ltd 1928 A L Rowse Homosexuals in History New York Carroll amp Garf 1977 p 44 Jardine Lisa Stewart Alan Hostage To Fortune The Troubled Life of Francis Bacon Hill amp Wang 1999 p 148 Charles R Forker Masculine Love Renaissance Writing and the New Invention of Homosexuality An Addendum in the Journal of Homosexuality 1996 Indiana University Journal of Homosexuality Volume 31 Issue 3 1996 pp 85 93 ISSN 0091 8369 Oliver Lawson Dick ed Aubrey s Brief Lives Edited from the Original Manuscripts 1949 s v Francis Bacon Viscount of St Albans p 11 Fulton Anderson Francis Bacon His career and his thought Los Angeles 1962 du Maurier Daphne 1975 Golden Lads A Study of Anthony Bacon Francis and Their Friends London Gollancz ISBN 978 1 84408 073 1 Aldrich Robert Wotherspoon Gary 2005 Who s Who in Gay and Lesbian History Vol 1 From Antiquity to the Mid Twentieth Century London and New York Routledge p 33 ISBN 978 0 415 15982 1 Ross Jackson The Companion to Shaker of the Speare The Francis Bacon Story England Book Guild Publishing 2005 pp 45 46 a b Bryan Bevan The Real Francis Bacon England Centaur Press 1960 Helen Veale Son of England India Indo Polish Library 1950 Peter Dawkins Dedication to the Light England Francis Bacon Research Trust 1984 Bacon Francis The New Atlantis 1627 a b The Broadview Anthology of Seventeenth Century Prose Broadview Press 21 March 2001 p 18 Bowen Catherine 1 January 1993 Francis Bacon The Temper of a Man Fordham University Press p 225 Bacon Francis 1825 1834 Montagu Basil ed The works of Francis Bacon lord chancellor of England Vol 12 London W Pickering p 274 Rawley William Bacon s personal secretary and chaplain 1657 Resuscitatio or Bringing into Publick Light Several Pieces of the Works Civil Historical Philosophical amp Theological Hitherto Sleeping of the Right Honourable Francis Bacon Together with his Lordship s Life Francis Bacon the glory of his age and nation the adorner and ornament of learning was born in York House or York Place in the Strand on the two and twentieth day of January in the year of our Lord 1560 Gundry W G C ed Manes Verulamani This important volume consists of 32 eulogies originally published in Latin shortly after Bacon s funeral in 1626 Bacon s peers refer to him as a supreme poet and a concealed poet and also link him with the theatre a b Lovejoy Benjamin 1888 Francis Bacon A Critical Review London Unwin p 171 OCLC 79886184 Officer Lawrence Williamson Samuel Purchasing Power of British Pounds from 1264 to Present Measuring Worth Retrieved 1 December 2021 Farrington 1964 Bacon Francis 1620 The Great Instauration via Wikisource Bacon Francis Of Superstition Essays civil and moral Harvard Classics Ben Meaning Abarim Salem Meaning Abarim Bacon Francis 1996 Meditationes Sacrae ISBN 9781564596413 a b Kocher Paul 1957 Francis Bacon and the Science of Jurisprudence Journal of the History of Ideas Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press 8 1 3 26 doi 10 2307 2707577 JSTOR 2707577 Turner Henry S 2013 Francis Bacon s Common Notion Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies 13 3 7 32 doi 10 1353 jem 2013 0023 ISSN 1553 3786 S2CID 153693271 Bacon Francis 1902 Devey Joseph ed Novum Organum New York Collier doi 10 5962 bhl title 17510 Brooks Christopher 1993 Daniel R Coquillette Francis Bacon Stanford Calif Stanford University Press 1992 Pp x 358 39 50 Albion 25 3 484 485 doi 10 2307 4050890 ISSN 0095 1390 JSTOR 4050890 Nisbet H B 1967 Herder and Francis Bacon The Modern Language Review 62 2 267 283 doi 10 2307 3723840 ISSN 0026 7937 JSTOR 3723840 Martin Julian 1992 Francis Bacon The State and the Reform of Natural Philosophy Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 38249 6 page needed Steel Byron 1930 Sir Francis Bacon The First Modern Mind Garden City NY Doubleday Doran amp Co a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Hundert EJ 1987 Enlightenment and the decay of common sense In Frits van Holthoon amp David R Olson Eds Common Sense The Foundations for Social Science pp 133 154 Lanham MD University Press of America p 136 Urbach Peter 1987 Francis Bacon s Philosophy of Science An Account and a Reappraisal La Salle Ill Open Court Publishing Co ISBN 978 0 912050 44 7 p 192 Bacon s celebrity as a philosopher of science has sunk since the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries when he earned the title of Father of Experimental Philosophy Bacon Francis 1 June 2003 History of Life and Death ISBN 978 0 7661 6272 3 Hepworth Dixon William 1862 The story of Lord Bacon s Life 1862 Lab law 4 NF CA Heritage 1701 Archived from the original on 21 October 2013 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Bacon Locke and Newton The Letters of Thomas Jefferson 1743 1826 Netherlands RUG Retrieved 13 June 2009 Bacon Locke and Newton whose pictures I will trouble you to have copied for me and as I consider them as the three greatest men that have ever lived without any exception and as having laid the foundation of those superstructures which have been raised in the Physical amp Moral sciences a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help CS1 maint multiple names authors list link FB life essay UK FBRT Archived from the original on 31 January 2012 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Hepworth Dixon William 1 February 2003 Personal History of Lord Bacon from Unpublished Papers p 200 ISBN 978 0 7661 2798 2 Crowther J G 19 January 1961 Article about Francis Bacon New Scientist Hepworth Dixon William 1861 Personal history of Lord Bacon From unpublished papers J Murray p 35 Wheeler Harvey Francis Bacon s Verulamium the Common Law Template of The Modern in English Science and Culture Sir Francis Bacon Archived 2 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine GraysInn org Retrieved 21 August 2015 Hanson Elizabeth Spring 1991 Torture and Truth in Renaissance England Representations 34 53 84 doi 10 1525 rep 1991 34 1 99p0046u Langbein John H 1976 Torture and the Law of Proof The University of Chicago Press p 90 Frances Yates Theatre of the World London Routledge amp Kegan Paul 1969 Daphne du Maurier The Winding Stair Biography of Bacon 1976 Frances Yates The Occult Philosophy in the Elizabethan Age pp 61 68 London Routledge amp Kegan Paul 1979 a b Frances Yates The Rosicrucian Enlightenment London and Boston Routledge amp Kegan Paul 1972 Bacon Francis Of the Proficience and Advancement of Learning Divine and Human Andreae 1619 Farrington Benjamin 1951 Francis Bacon philosopher of industrial science New York ISBN 978 0 374 92706 6 Literary criticism of Johann Valentin Andreae Enotes com Retrieved 21 October 2013 a b Rossi 1968 Chapter 1 Rossi 1968 Chapter 3 Josephson Storm 2017 p 46 Josephson Storm 2017 pp 50 51 The Mastery of Life PDF Rosicrucian org p 31 Archived PDF from the original on 6 February 2004 Retrieved 21 October 2013 Saint Germain Foundation The History of the I AM Activity and Saint Germain Foundation Schaumburg Illinois Saint Germain Press 2003 Luk A D K Law of Life Book II Pueblo Colorado A D K Luk Publications 1989 pp 254 267 White Paper Wesak World Congress 2002 Acropolis Sophia Books amp Works 2003 Partridge Christopher ed New Religions A Guide New Religious Movements Sects and Alternative Spiritualities Oxford University Press United States 2004 Schroeder Werner Ascended Masters and Their Retreats Ascended Master Teaching Foundation 2004 pp 250 255 Alban Francis Bacon Viscount St 1 January 1620 Instauratio magna preliminaries in Rees ed The Oxford Francis Bacon Vol 11 The Instauratio magna Part II Novum organum and Associated Texts Oxford University Press pp 2 495 doi 10 1093 oseo instance 00007240 ISBN 978 0 19 924792 9Sources EditPrimary sources Edit Bacon Francis The Essays and Counsels Civil and Moral of Francis Bacon all 3 volumes in a single file B amp R Samizdat Express 2014 Andreae Johann Valentin 1619 Christianopolis Description of the Republic of Christianopolis New York Oxford university press American branch etc etc Spedding James Ellis Robert Leslie Heath Douglas Denon 1857 1874 The Works of Francis Bacon Baron of Verulam Viscount St Albans and Lord High Chancellor of England 15 volumes London Secondary sources Edit Adamson Robert 1878 Francis Bacon Encyclopaedia Britannica vol 3 9th ed pp 200 218 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Adamson Robert Mitchell John Malcolm 1911 Bacon Francis Encyclopaedia Britannica vol 3 11th ed pp 135 152 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Pollard Albert Frederick 1911 Burghley William Cecil Baron Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 4 11th ed pp 816 817 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Jackson Samuel Macauley ed 1908 Bacon Francis New Schaff Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge Vol 2 third ed London and New York Funk and Wagnalls Crease Robert P 2019 One Francis Bacon s New Atlantis The Workshop and the World What Ten Thinkers Can Teach Us About Science and Authority New York W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0 393 29244 2 Fowler Thomas 1885 Bacon Francis 1561 1626 In Stephen Leslie ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 2 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 328 360 Peltonen Markku 2007 2004 Bacon Francis Viscount St Alban 1561 1626 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 990 Subscription or UK public library membership required Further reading EditAgassi Joseph 2013 The Very Idea of Modern Science Francis Bacon and Robert Boyle Springer ISBN 978 94 007 5350 1 Farrell John 2006 6 The Science of Suspicion Paranoia and Modernity Cervantes to Rousseau Ithaca NY Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 7406 4 Farrington Benjamin 1964 The Philosophy of Francis Bacon University of Chicago Press Contains English translations of Temporis Partus Masculus Cogitata et Visa Redargutio Philosophiarum Josephson Storm Jason 2017 The Myth of Disenchantment Magic Modernity and the Birth of the Human Sciences Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 40336 6 Heese Mary 1968 Francis Bacon s Philosophy of Science In Vickers Brian ed Essential Articles for the Study of Francis Bacon Hamden CT Archon Books pp 114 139 ISBN 9780208006240 Lewis Rhodri 2014 Francis Bacon and Ingenuity Renaissance Quarterly 67 1 113 163 doi 10 1086 676154 JSTOR 10 1086 676154 S2CID 170420555 Roselle Daniel Young Anne P 5 The Scientific Revolution and the Intellectual Revolution Our Western Heritage full citation needed Rossi Paolo 1968 Francis Bacon from Magic to Science University of Chicago Press Serjeantson Richard Francis Bacon and the Interpretation of Nature in the Late Renaissance Isis December 2014 105 4 pp 681 705 External links EditFrancis Bacon at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Data from Wikidata Klein Juergen Francis Bacon In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Francis Bacon Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Works by Francis Bacon at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Francis Bacon at Internet Archive Works by Francis Bacon at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Archival material relating to Francis Bacon UK National Archives Contains the New Organon slightly modified for easier reading Lord Macaulay s essay Lord Bacon Edinburgh Review 1837 Lord Bacon Francis Bacon of Verulam Realistic Philosophy and its Age by Kuno Fischer translated from the German by John Oxenford London 1857 Bacon by Thomas Fowler 1881 public domain at Internet Archive The Francis Bacon Society Six Degrees of Francis Bacon Journals of the Francis Bacon Society from 1886 to 1999 English translation of Hugo von Hofmannsthal s fictional The Lord Chandos Letter addressed to Bacon The George Fabyan Collection at the Library of Congress is rich in the works of Francis Bacon Francis Bacon Research Trust Sir Francis Bacon s New Advancement of Learning Montmorency James E G 1913 Francis Bacon In Macdonell John Manson Edward William Donoghue eds Great Jurists of the World London John Murray pp 144 168 Retrieved 11 March 2019 via Internet Archive Letterbook and correspondence by Sir Francis Bacon at Columbia University Rare Book amp Manuscript Library Political officesPreceded bySir Henry Hobart Attorney General of England and Wales1613 1617 Succeeded byHenry YelvertonPreceded byThe Viscount Brackley Lord High Chancellor of England1617 1621 In commissionParliament of EnglandPreceded byFrancis KinwellmarshRobert Doyly Member of Parliament for Bossiney1581 1584 With Robert Redge Succeeded bySir Francis DrakeJohn LevesonPreceded byLaurence TomsonJohn WolleyMoyle FinchThomas Hanham Member of Parliament for Weymouth and Melcombe Regis1584 1585 With Laurence TomsonGeorge GrenvilleEdward Penruddock Succeeded byLaurence TomsonEdward BaconWilliam SpryntEdward PhelipsPreceded byMaurice HornerWilliam Goldwell Member of Parliament for Taunton1586 1588 With John Goldwell Succeeded byThomas FisherJohn GoldwellPreceded byJohn PooleWilliam Cavendish Member of Parliament for Liverpool1588 1593 With Edward Warren Succeeded byMichael DoughtyJohn WrothPreceded byRobert WrothWilliam Fleetwood Member of Parliament for Middlesex1593 With Robert Wroth Succeeded byRobert WrothSir John PeytonPreceded byRobert BarkerZachariah Lok Member of Parliament for Ipswich1597 1614 With Michael Stanhope 1597 1604 Henry Glemham 1604 1614 Succeeded byRobert SnellingWilliam CagePreceded byNicholas StewardHenry Mountlow Member of Parliament for Cambridge University1614 1621 With Sir Miles Sandys Succeeded byRobert NauntonBarnabas Gooch Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Francis Bacon amp oldid 1146854676, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.