Wednesday, March 23, 2016

Introduction


During the scientific revolution knowledge and its proliferation by way of print media acted as a means of establishing and garnering power. No longer accepting the divine tenets of religion as absolute truth, people throughout Europe began to seek understanding of the world on an independent basis through exploration, classification and study. The result of this steadfast pursuit for objective truth during the time between the 16th -19th centuries was the widespread propagation of knowledge through published works, art, presentation, and other forms of spectacle. As these “objectively” derived scientific explanations of the world permeated the minds and understandings of everyday people throughout Europe and the world at large “knowledge” began to manifest itself as a potent form of political and social power, dictating the way individuals and entire societies interacted with each other.

The three of us have each pursued a topic that uniquely investigates the role of knowledge as power in Europe during the scientific revolution and Enlightenment age...


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