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The
Poetic Structure of the World is a major reconsideration of
a crucial turning point in Western thought and culture: the heliocentric
revolution of Copernicus and Kepler. Conceiving of their work not
in terms of a history of science or astronomy, but as events embedded
in a wider field of images, symbols, texts, and practices, Fernand
Hallyn insists that these new representations of the universe cannot
be explained by recourse to theories of “genius” and
“intuition.” The scientific imagination is not fundamentally
different from a mythic or poetic imagination, and the work of Copernicus
and Kepler, Hallyn contends, must be examined on the level of rhetorical
structure. Thus the new sun-centered universe is shown to be inseparable
from the aesthetic, epistemological, theological, and social imperatives
of both Neoplatonism and Mannerism in the sixteenth century.
“A fascinating dialogue on the discourses of early modern
astronomy. Hallyn’s study of hypotheses, the heuristic fictions
of science, takes its cue from C.S. Peirce’s work on abduction
and abductive inference in science, but his work really begins where
Peirce’s epistemology leaves off: with the categories of early
modern inquiry, a task to which Hallyn ... is particularly well
suited.”
— MLN
“A book in the best tradition of the interdisciplinary and
intellectual freedom that has characterized philosophy and the human
sciences since the 1960s.”
— Libération
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