Roger Bacon OFM (/ˈbeɪkən/;[6] Latin: Rogerus or Rogerius Baconus, Baconis, also Frater Rogerus; c. 1219/20 - c. 1292), also known by the
scholastic
accolade Doctor
Mirabilis, was a medieval English
philosopher and Franciscan friar who placed considerable emphasis on the study
of nature through empiricism. In the early
modern era, he was
regarded as a wizard and particularly famed for the story of his mechanical or necromantic brazen head. He is sometimes credited (mainly
since the 19th century) as one of the earliest European advocates of the modern
scientific
method inspired by Aristotle and by Alhazen.[7]
His linguistic work has been
heralded for its early exposition of a universal grammar. However, more recent
re-evaluations emphasise that Bacon was essentially a medieval thinker, with
much of his "experimental" knowledge obtained from books in the scholastic tradition.[8] He was, however, partially
responsible for a revision of the medieval
university
curriculum, which saw the addition of optics to the traditional quadrivium.[9] A survey of how Bacon's work was
received over the centuries found that it often reflected the concerns and
controversies that were central to his readers.[10]
Bacon's major work, the Opus Majus, was sent to Pope Clement IV in Rome in 1267 upon the pope's
request. Although gunpowder was first
invented and described in China, Bacon was the first in Europe to record its formula.
Life
Roger Bacon was born in Ilchester in Somerset, England, in the early 13th century,
although his date of birth is sometimes narrowed down to c. 1210,[11] "1213 or 1214",[12] or "1215".[13] However, modern scholars tend to
argue for the date of c. 1220, but there are disagreements on this.[11] The only source for his birth date
is a statement from his 1267 Opus Tertium
that "forty years have passed since I first learned the Alphabetum".[14] The latest dates assume this
referred to the alphabet itself, but elsewhere in the Opus Tertium it is clear that Bacon uses the term to refer
to rudimentary studies, the trivium or quadrivium that formed the medieval
curriculum.[15] His family appears to have been
well off.[16]
Bacon studied at Oxford.[n 2] While Robert
Grosseteste had
probably left shortly before Bacon's arrival, his work and legacy almost
certainly influenced the young scholar[11] and it is possible Bacon
subsequently visited him and William
of Sherwood in Lincoln.[18] Bacon became a master at Oxford, lecturing on Aristotle. There is no evidence he was ever
awarded a doctorate. (The title Doctor Mirabilis
was posthumous and figurative.) A caustic cleric named Roger Bacon is recorded
speaking before the king at Oxford in 1233.[19]
In 1237 or at some point in the
following decade, he accepted an invitation to teach at the University
of Paris.[20] While there, he lectured on Latin grammar, Aristotelian logic, arithmetic, geometry, and the mathematical aspects of astronomy and music.[21] His faculty colleagues included Robert Kilwardby, Albertus Magnus, and Peter of Spain,[22] the future Pope John XXI.[23] The Cornishman Richard Rufus
was a scholarly opponent.[21] In 1247 or soon after, he left his
position in Paris.[23]
As a private scholar, his
whereabouts for the next decade are uncertain[24] but he was likely in Oxford c. 1248-1251,
where he met Adam Marsh, and in Paris in 1251.[21] He seems to have studied most of
the known Greek and Arabic works on optics[22] (then known as
"perspective", perspectiva). A passage in the Opus Tertium states that at some point he took a two-year
break from his studies.[14]
By the late 1250s, resentment
against the
king's preferential
treatment of his
émigré Poitevin relatives led to a
coup and the
imposition of the Provisions
of Oxford and Westminster,
instituting a baronial council and more frequent parliaments. Pope Urban IV absolved the king of his oath in
1261 and, after initial
abortive resistance,
Simon de Montfort led a force, enlarged due to recent crop
failures, that prosecuted the Second
Barons' War.
Bacon's own family were considered royal partisans:[25] De Montfort's men seized their
property[n 3] and drove several members into
exile.[2]
In 1256 or 1257, he became a friar in the Franciscan Order in either Paris or Oxford,
following the example of scholarly English Franciscans such as Grosseteste and Marsh.[21] After 1260, Bacon's activities were
restricted by a statute prohibiting the friars of his order from publishing
books or pamphlets without prior approval.[26] He was likely kept at constant
menial tasks to limit his time for contemplation[27] and came to view his treatment as
an enforced absence from scholarly life.[21]
By the mid-1260s, he was undertaking
a search for patrons who could secure permission and funding for his return to
Oxford.[27] For a time, Bacon was finally able
to get around his superiors' interference through his acquaintance with Guy de Foulques, bishop of Narbonne, cardinal of Sabina, and the papal legate who negotiated between England's
royal and baronial factions.[25]
In 1263 or
While faculties of the time were
largely limited to addressing disputes on the known texts of Aristotle,
Clement's patronage permitted Bacon to engage in a wide-ranging consideration
of the state of knowledge in his era.[21] In 1267 or '68, Bacon sent the Pope
his Opus Majus, which presented his views on how to
incorporate Aristotelian
logic and science into a new theology, supporting
Grosseteste's text-based approach against the "sentence method" then
fashionable.[21]
Bacon also sent his Opus Minus, De Multiplicatione Specierum,[29] De Speculis Comburentibus, an optical lens,[21] and possibly other works on alchemy and astrology.[29][n 4] The entire process has been called
"one of the most remarkable single efforts of literary productivity",
with Bacon composing referenced works of around a million words in about a
year.[30]
Pope Clement died in 1268 and Bacon
lost his protector. The Condemnations of 1277 banned the teaching of certain philosophical doctrines, including
deterministic astrology. Some time within the next two years, Bacon was
apparently imprisoned or placed under house arrest. This was traditionally ascribed to
Franciscan Minister General Jerome
of Ascoli, probably
acting on behalf of the many clergy, monks, and educators attacked by Bacon's
1271 Compendium Studii
Philosophiae.[2]
Modern scholarship, however, notes
that the first reference to Bacon's "imprisonment" dates from eighty
years after his death on the charge of unspecified "suspected novelties"[31][32] and finds it less than credible.[33] Contemporary scholars who do accept
Bacon's imprisonment typically associate it with Bacon's "attraction to
contemporary prophesies",[34] his sympathies for "the
radical 'poverty' wing of the Franciscans",[33] interest in certain astrological doctrines,[35] or generally combative personality[32] rather than from "any
scientific novelties which he may have proposed".[33]
Sometime after 1278, Bacon returned
to the Franciscan House at Oxford, where he continued his studies[36] and is presumed to have spent most
of the remainder of his life. His last dateable writing—the Compendium Studii Theologiae—was completed in 1292.[2] He seems to have died shortly
afterwards and been buried at Oxford.[3]
Works
A manuscript illustration of Bacon presenting one of his works to the
chancellor of the University of Paris
Medieval European philosophy often
relied on appeals
to the authority of
Church
Fathers such as St Augustine, and on works by Plato and Aristotle only known at second hand or
through (sometimes highly inaccurate) Latin translations. By the 13th century,
new works and better versions - in Arabic or in new Latin translations from the Arabic -
began to trickle north from Muslim Spain. In Roger Bacon's writings, he
upholds Aristotle's calls for the collection of facts before deducing
scientific truths, against the practices of his contemporaries, arguing that
"thence cometh quiet to the mind".
Bacon also called for reform with
regard to theology. He argued that, rather than
training to debate minor philosophical distinctions, theologians should focus
their attention primarily on the Bible itself, learning the languages of its original
sources thoroughly. He was fluent in several of these languages and was able to
note and bemoan several corruptions of scripture, and of the works of the Greek
philosophers that had been mistranslated or misinterpreted by scholars working
in Latin. He also argued for the education of theologians in science ("natural
philosophy")
and its addition to the medieval
curriculum.
·
Opus Majus
Optic studies by Bacon. Main article: Opus Majus
Bacon's Greater Work, the Opus Majus,[n 5] contains treatments of mathematics, optics, alchemy, and astronomy, including theories on the
positions and sizes of the celestial bodies. It is divided into seven sections:
"The Four General Causes of Human Ignorance" (Causae Erroris),[37] "The Affinity of Philosophy
with Theology" (Philosophiae
cum Theologia Affinitas),[38] "On the Usefulness of
Grammar" (De
Utilitate Grammaticae),[39] "The Usefulness of Mathematics
in Physics" (Mathematicae
in Physicis Utilitas),[40] "On the Science of Perspective" (De Scientia Perspectivae),[41] "On Experimental
Knowledge" (De
Scientia Experimentali),[42] and "A Philosophy of
Morality" (Moralis
Philosophia).[43]
It was not intended as a complete
work but as a "persuasive preamble" (persuasio praeambula), an enormous proposal for a reform of the medieval
university
curriculum and the establishment of a kind of library or encyclopedia, bringing
in experts to compose a collection of definitive texts on these subjects.[44] The new subjects were to be
"perspective" (i.e., optics), "astronomy" (inclusive of astronomy proper, astrology, and the geography necessary in order to use them),
"weights" (likely some treatment of mechanics but this section of the Opus Majus has been lost), alchemy, agriculture (inclusive of botany and zoology), medicine, and "experimental science", a philosophy
of science that
would guide the others.[44] The section on geography was
allegedly originally ornamented with a map based on ancient and Arabic
computations of longitude and latitude, but has since been lost.[45] His (mistaken) arguments supporting
the idea that dry land formed the larger proportion of the globe were
apparently similar to those which later guided Columbus.[45]
In this work Bacon criticises his
contemporaries Alexander
of Hales and Albertus Magnus, who were held in high repute
despite having only acquired their knowledge of Aristotle at second hand during their
preaching careers.[46][47] Albert was received at Paris as an
authority equal to Aristotle, Avicenna and Averroes,[48] a situation Bacon decried:
"never in the world [had] such monstrosity occurred before."[49]
In Part I of the Opus Majus
Bacon recognises some philosophers as the Sapientes, or gifted few, and
saw their knowledge in philosophy and theology as superior to the vulgus
philosophantium, or common herd of philosophers. He held Islamic thinkers
between 1210 and
·
Calendrical reform
Main: Calendrical reform and Gregorian calendar
In Part IV of the Opus Majus, Bacon proposed a calendrical reform similar to the later system introduced in 1582 under Pope Gregory XIII.[40] Drawing on ancient
Greek and medieval Islamic astronomy recently introduced to western
Europe via Spain, Bacon continued the work of Robert
Grosseteste and
criticised the then-current Julian calendar as "intolerable, horrible, and
laughable".
It had become apparent that Eudoxus and Sosigenes's assumption of a year of 365¼ days
was, over the course of centuries, too inexact. Bacon charged that this meant
the computation of Easter had shifted forward by 9 days since
the First
Council of Nicaea
in 325.[51] His proposal to drop one day every
125 years[40][52] and to cease the observance of
fixed equinoxes and solstices[51] was not acted upon following the
death of Pope
Clement IV in 1268.
The eventual Gregorian
calendar drops one
day from the first three centuries in each set of 400 years.
·
Optics
Bacon's diagram of light being refracted by a
spherical container of water. See also: History of optics
In Part V of the Opus Majus, Bacon discusses physiology of eyesight and the anatomy of the eye and the brain, considering light, distance, position, and size, direct and reflected vision, refraction, mirrors, and lenses.[41] His treatment was primarily
oriented by the Latin translation of Alhazen's Book of Optics. He also draws heavily on Eugene of Palermo's Latin translation of the Arabic
translation of Ptolemy's Optics; on Robert
Grosseteste's work
based on Al-Kindi's Optics; [7][53] and, through Alhazen (Ibn al-Haytham), on Ibn Sahl's
work on dioptrics.[54]
·
Gunpowder
"Roger Bacon discovers
gunpowder", "whereby Guy Fawkes was made possible",[55] an image from Bill Nye's Comic History of England[56]
A passage in the Opus Majus and another in the Opus Tertium are usually taken as the first European
descriptions of a mixture containing the essential ingredients of gunpowder. Partington and others have come to the
conclusion that Bacon most likely witnessed at least one demonstration of Chinese firecrackers, possibly obtained by
Franciscans—including Bacon's friend William
of Rubruck—who
visited the Mongol
Empire during this
period.[57][n 6] The most telling passage reads:
We have an example of these things (that act on the senses) in [the
sound and fire of] that children's toy which is made in many [diverse] parts of
the world; i.e. a device no bigger than one's thumb. From the violence of that
salt called saltpetre [together with sulphur and willow charcoal, combined into
a powder] so horrible a sound is made by the bursting of a thing so small, no
more than a bit of parchment [containing it], that we find [the ear assaulted
by a noise] exceeding the roar of strong thunder, and a flash brighter than the
most brilliant lightning.[57]
At the beginning of the 20th
century, Henry William Lovett Hime of the Royal Artillery published the theory that Bacon's Epistola contained a cryptogram giving a recipe for the gunpowder
he witnessed.[59] The theory was criticised by Thorndike in a 1915 letter to Science[60] and several books, a position
joined by Muir,[61] Stillman,[61] Steele,[62] and Sarton.[63] Needham et al. concurred with these earlier critics
that the additional passage did not originate with Bacon[57] and further showed that the
proportions supposedly deciphered (a 7:5:5 ratio of saltpetre to charcoal to sulphur) as not even useful for firecrackers, burning
slowly with a great deal of smoke and failing to ignite inside a gun barrel.[64] The ~41% nitrate content is too low to have explosive
properties.[65]
Friar Bacon in his study[66]
·
Secret of Secrets
Main article: Secretum
Secretorum
Bacon attributed the Secret of
Secrets (Secretum
Secretorum), the
Islamic "Mirror of Princes" (Arabic: Sirr al-ʿasrar), to Aristotle, thinking that he had composed it
for Alexander
the Great. Bacon
produced an edited edition complete with his own introduction and notes and his
writings of the 1260s and 1270s cite it far more than his contemporaries did.
This led Easton[67] and others including Robert Steele[68] to argue that the text spurred
Bacon's own transformation into an experimentalist. (Bacon never described such
a decisive impact himself.)[68] The dating of Bacon's edition of
the Secret of Secrets is a key piece of evidence in the debate, with
those arguing for a greater impact giving it an earlier date,[68] but it certainly influenced the
elder Bacon's conception of the political aspects of his work in the sciences.[21]
·
Alchemy
Bacon has been credited with a
number of alchemical texts.[69]
The Letter on the Secret Workings
of Art and Nature and on the Vanity of Magic (Epistola de Secretis Operibus Artis et Naturae et
de Nullitate Magiae),[70] also known as On the Wonderful
Powers of Art and Nature (De Mirabili Potestate Artis et Naturae), a likely-forged letter to an unknown
"William of Paris," dismisses practices such as necromancy[71] but contains most of the alchemical
formulae attributed to Bacon,[69] including one for a philosopher's
stone[72] and another possibly for gunpowder.[57] It also includes several passages
about hypothetical
flying machines and
submarines, attributing their first use to Alexander
the Great.[73] On the Vanity of Magic or The
Nullity of Magic is a debunking of esoteric claims in Bacon's time,
showing that they could be explained by natural phenomena.[74]
·
Linguistics
Main article: Summa Grammatica. See also: Universal grammar
Bacon's early linguistic and logical
works are the Overview of Grammar (Summa Grammatica), Summa de Sophismatibus et Distinctionibus, and the Summulae Dialectices or Summulae super Totam Logicam.[21] These are mature but essentially
conventional presentations of Oxford and Paris's terminist and pre-modist logic and grammar.[21] His later work in linguistics is
much more idiosyncratic, using terminology and addressing questions unique in
his era.[75]
In his Greek and Hebrew Grammars (Grammatica Graeca and Hebraica), in his work "On the Usefulness of
Grammar" (Book III of the Opus Majus), and in his Compendium of the Study of
Philosophy,[75] Bacon stresses the need for scholars
to know several languages.[76] Europe's vernacular languages are
not ignored—he considers them useful for practical purposes such as trade, proselytism, and administration—but
Bacon is mostly interested in his era's languages of science and religion: Arabic, Greek, Hebrew and Latin.[76]
Bacon is less interested in a full
practical mastery of the other languages than on a theoretical understanding of
their grammatical rules, ensuring that a Latin reader will not misunderstand
passages' original
meaning.[76] For this reason, his treatments of
Greek and Hebrew grammar are not isolated works on their topic[76] but contrastive grammars treating
the aspects which influenced Latin or which were required for properly
understanding Latin texts.[77] He pointedly states, "I want
to describe Greek grammar for the benefit of Latin speakers".[78][n 7] It is likely only this limited
sense which was intended by Bacon's boast that he could
teach an interested pupil a new language within three days.[77][n 8]
Passages in the Overview and
the Greek grammar have been taken as an early exposition of a universal grammar underlying all human languages.[79] The Greek grammar contains the
tersest and most famous exposition:[79]
Grammar is one and the same in all languages, substantially, though it
may vary, accidentally, in each of them.[82][n 9]
However, Bacon's lack of interest in
studying a literal grammar underlying the languages known to
him and his numerous works on linguistics and comparative linguistics has
prompted Hovdhaugen
to question the usual literal translation of Bacon's grammatica in such passages.[83] She notes the ambiguity in the
Latin term, which could refer variously to the structure of language, to its
description, and to the science underlying such descriptions: i.e., linguistics.[83]
Other works
Art: A portrait of Roger Bacon from a 15th-century
edition of De Retardatione[84]
Bacon states that his Lesser Work
(Opus Minus) and Third Work (Opus Tertium) were originally intended as summaries of the Opus Majus in case it was lost in transit.[44] Easton's review of the texts suggests that they
became separate works over the course of the laborious process of creating a fair copy of the Opus Majus, whose half-million words were copied by hand
and apparently greatly revised at least once.[30]
Other works by Bacon include his
"Tract on the Multiplication of Species" (Tractatus de Multiplicatione Specierum),[86] "On Burning Lenses" (De Speculis Comburentibus), the Communia Naturalium and Mathematica,
the "Compendium of the Study of Philosophy" and "of
Theology" (Compendium
Studii Philosophiae
and Theologiae), and his Computus.[21] The "Compendium of the Study
of Theology", presumably written in the last years of his life, was an
anticlimax: adding nothing new, it is principally devoted to the concerns of
the 1260s.
·
Apocrypha
The Mirror of Alchimy (Speculum
Alchemiae), a short
treatise on the origin and composition of metals, is traditionally credited to
Bacon.[87] It espouses the Arabian theory of mercury and sulphur forming the other metals, with vague allusions
to transmutation. Stillman opined that "there is nothing
in it that is characteristic of Roger Bacon's style or ideas, nor that
distinguishes it from many unimportant alchemical lucubrations of anonymous
writers of the thirteenth to the sixteenth centuries", and Muir and Lippmann
also considered it a pseudepigraph.[88]
The cryptic Voynich
manuscript has been
attributed to Bacon by various sources, including by its first recorded owner,[89][90][91] but historians
of science Lynn Thorndike and George Sarton dismissed these claims as
unsupported.[92][93][94] and the vellum of the manuscript has since been dated to the
15th century.[95]
Legacy
"Friar Bacon's Study" in Oxford. By the late 18th century
this study on Folly Bridge had become a place of pilgrimage for scientists, but the building was
pulled down in 1779 to allow for road widening.[96]
Bacon was largely ignored by his
contemporaries in favor of other scholars such as Albertus Magnus, Bonaventure, and Thomas Aquinas,[16] although his works were studied by
Bonaventure, John
Pecham, and Peter of Limoges, through whom he may have
influenced Raymond
Lull.[22] He was also partially responsible
for the addition of optics (perspectiva) to
the medieval
university curriculum.[9]
By the early
modern period, the
English considered him the epitome of a wise and subtle possessor of forbidden
knowledge, a Faust-like magician who had tricked the devil and so was able to go to heaven. Of these legends, one of the most
prominent was that he created a talking brazen head which could answer any question.
The story appears in the anonymous 16th-century account of The Famous
Historie of Fryer Bacon,[n 10] in which Bacon speaks with a demon
but causes the head to speak by "the continuall fume of the six hottest
Simples",[99] testing his theory that speech is
caused by "an effusion of vapors".[100]
Around 1589, Robert Greene
adapted the story for the stage as The Honorable Historie of Frier
Bacon and Frier Bongay,[101][102][103] one of the most successful Elizabethan comedies.[102] As late as the 1640s, Thomas Browne was still complaining that
"Every ear is filled with the story of Frier Bacon, that made a brazen
head to speak these words, Time is".[104] Greene's Bacon spent seven years
creating a brass head that would speak "strange and uncouth
aphorisms"[105] to enable him to encircle Britain with a wall of brass that would make it
impossible to conquer.
Unlike his source material, Greene
does not cause his head to operate by natural forces but by "nigromantic charms" and "the
enchanting forces of the devil":[106] i.e., by entrapping a dead spirit[100] or hobgoblin.[107] Bacon collapses, exhausted, just
before his device comes to life and announces "Time is", "Time
was", and "Time is Past"[108] before being destroyed in
spectacular fashion: the stage direction instructs that "a
lightening flasheth forth, and a hand appears that breaketh down the Head with
a hammer".[109]
A necromantic head was ascribed to Pope Sylvester II as early as the 1120s,[110][n 11] but Browne considered the legend to be a misunderstanding
of a passage in Peter the
Good's c. 1335 Precious Pearl where the negligent alchemist
misses the birth of his creation and loses it forever.[104] The story may also preserve the
work by Bacon and his contemporaries to construct clockwork armillary spheres.[113] Bacon had praised a
"self-activated working model of the heavens" as "the greatest
of all things which have been devised".[114]
As early as the 16th century, natural
philosophers like Bruno, Dee,[115] and Francis Bacon[9] were attempting to rehabilitate
Bacon's reputation and to portray him as a scientific pioneer who had avoided
the petty bickering of his contemporaries to attempt a rational understanding
of nature. By the 19th century, commenters following Whewell[116][9] considered that "Bacon... was
not appreciated in his age because he was so completely in advance of it; he is
a 16th- or 17th-century philosopher, whose lot has been by some accident cast
in the 13th century".[16] His assertions in the Opus Majus that "theories supplied by reason should
be verified by sensory data, aided by instruments, and corroborated by
trustworthy witnesses"[117] were (and still are) considered
"one of the first important formulations of the scientific method on record".[74]
This idea that Bacon was a modern
experimental scientist reflected two views of the period: that the principal
form of scientific activity is experimentation and that 13th-century Europe
still represented the "Dark Ages".[118] This view, which is still reflected
in some 21st-century popular science books,[121] portrays Bacon as an advocate of
modern experimental science who emerged as a solitary genius in an age hostile
to his ideas.[122] Based on Bacon's apocrypha, he is also portrayed as a visionary who
predicted the invention of the submarine, aircraft, and automobile.[123]
However, in the course of the 20th
century, Husserl, Heidegger and others emphasised the
importance to modern science of Cartesian and Galilean projections of mathematics over sensory perceptions of nature;
Heidegger in particular noted the lack of such an understanding in Bacon's
works.[9] Although Crombie,[124] Kuhn[125] and Schramm[126] continued to argue for Bacon's
importance to the development of "qualitative" areas of modern
science,[9] Duhem,[127] Thorndike,[128][129] Carton[130] and Koyré[131] emphasised the essentially medieval
nature of Bacon's scientia
experimentalis.[130][132]
Research also established that Bacon
was not as isolated—and probably not as persecuted—as was once thought. Many
medieval sources of and influences on Bacon's scientific activity have been
identified.[133] In particular, Bacon often
mentioned his debt to the work of Robert
Grosseteste:[134] his work on optics and the calendar followed Grosseteste's lead,[135] as did his idea that inductively-derived
conclusions should
be submitted for verification through experimental testing.[136]
Bacon noted of William
of Sherwood that
"nobody was greater in philosophy than he";[137][138] praised Peter of Maricourt (the author of "A Letter on Magnetism")[139] and John of London as "perfect"
mathematicians; Campanus
of Novara (the
author of works on astronomy, astrology, and the calendar) and a Master
Nicholas as "good";[140] and acknowledged the influence of Adam Marsh and lesser figures. He was clearly
not an isolated genius.[134] The medieval church was also not
generally opposed to scientific investigation[141] and medieval science was both varied and extensive.[n 12]
As a result, the picture of Bacon
has changed. Bacon is now seen as part of his age: a leading figure in the beginnings
of the medieval
universities at Paris and Oxford but one joined in the development
of the philosophy of science by Robert
Grosseteste, William
of Auvergne, Henry of Ghent, Albert Magnus, Thomas Aquinas, John Duns Scotus, and William of Ockham.[143] Lindberg summarised:
Bacon was not a modern, out of step with his age, or a harbinger of
things to come, but a brilliant, combative, and somewhat eccentric schoolman of the thirteenth century,
endeavoring to take advantage of the new learning just becoming available while
remaining true to traditional notions... of the importance to be attached to
philosophical knowledge".[144]
A recent review of the many visions
of Bacon across the ages says contemporary scholarship still neglects one of
the most important aspects of his life and thought: his commitment to the Franciscan
order.
His Opus majus was a plea for reform addressed to the supreme
spiritual head of the Christian
faith, written
against a background of apocalyptic expectation and informed by the
driving concerns of the friars. It was designed to improve
training for missionaries and to provide new skills to be
employed in the defence of the Christian world against the enmity of
non-Christians and of the Antichrist. It cannot usefully be read solely
in the context of the history
of science and philosophy.[10]
With regard to religion's influence
on Bacon's philosophy, Charles
Sanders Peirce
noted, "To Roger Bacon,... the schoolmen's conception of reasoning
appeared only an obstacle to truth... [but] Of all kinds of experience, the
best, he thought, was interior illumination, which teaches many things about
Nature which the external senses could never discover, such as the transubstantiation of bread."[145]
In Oxford lore, Bacon is credited as the
namesake of Folly
Bridge for having
gotten himself placed under house arrest nearby.[146] Although this is probably untrue,[147] it had formerly been known as
"Friar Bacon's Bridge".[148] Bacon is also honoured at Oxford by
a plaque affixed to the wall of the new Westgate shopping centre.[146]
In popular culture
Art: William Blake's visionary head of "Friar Bacon"
To commemorate the 700th anniversary
of Bacon's approximate year of birth, Prof.
J. Erskine wrote
the biographical play A Pageant of the Thirteenth Century, which was
performed and published by Columbia
University in 1914.[149][150] A fictionalised account of Bacon's
life and times also appears in the second book of James Blish's After Such Knowledge
trilogy, the 1964 Doctor Mirabilis.[151] Bacon serves as a mentor to the
protagonists of Thomas
Costain's 1945 The Black Rose,[152][153] and Umberto Eco's 1980 The
Name of the Rose.[154] Greene's play
prompted a less successful sequel John of Bordeaux and was recast as a children's
story for James Baldwin's
1905 Thirty More Famous Stories Retold.[155] "The Brazen Head of Friar Bacon" also appears
in Daniel
Defoe's 1722 Journal of the Plague Year, Nathaniel
Hawthorne's 1843
"The
Birth-Mark"
and 1844 "The Artist of the Beautiful", William Douglas O'Connor's 1891 "The Brazen Android"
(where Bacon devises it to terrify King
Henry into accepting
Simon de Montfort's demands for greater democracy),[156][157] John Cowper Powys's 1956 The Brazen Head, and Robertson Davies's 1970 Fifth Business.[158]
See also
·
Baco, a lunar crater
named for Roger Bacon
·
History of geomagnetism, of translation, of the scientific
method, and of science in the Middle Ages
· List of Catholic clergy scientists
· Vitello
Notes
1. In a 1267 statement from Opus
tertium, Bacon claimed that it was forty years since he had learned the
alphabet and that for all but two of these he had been "in studio."
Assuming that Bacon started his education at age seven or eight, Crowley
estimated his birthdate to be 1219 or 1220.[1]
2. Bacon has been claimed as an
alumnus by both Merton and Brasenose, despite having attended before the establishment of the collegiate
system.[17]
3. Though probably granting it to a partisan of their own cause, rather
than razing it to the ground as is sometimes reported.[25]
4. It is still uncertain whether the Opus Tertium was sent with the others or
kept for further revision and development.[21]
5. In his works, Bacon also refers to it as his "primary writing"
(scriptum principale).[28]
6. "Europeans were prompted by all this to take a closer interest in
happenings far to the east. Four years after the invasion of 1241, the pope
sent an ambassador to the Great Khan's capital in Mongolia. Other travellers
followed later, of whom the most interesting was William of Rubruck (or Ruysbroek). He returned in 1257, and in the following year there
are reports of experiments with gunpowder and rockets at Cologne. Then a friend
of William of Rubruck, Roger Bacon, gave the first account of gunpowder and its
use in fireworks to be written in Europe. A form of gunpowder had been known in
China since before AD 900, and as mentioned earlier... Much of this knowledge
had reached the Islamic countries by then, and the saltpetre used in making
gunpowder there was sometimes referred to, significantly, as 'Chinese snow'."[58]
7. Latin: Cupiens igitur exponere gramaticam grecam ad vtilitatem latinorum.[78]
8. It has been claimed that the
copies of Bacon's grammars which have survived was not their final form, but Hovdhaugen considers that—even if that were the case—the final form would have
been similar in scope to the surviving texts and mostly focused on improving a
Latinate reader's understanding of texts in translation.[77]
9. Latin: ...grammatica vna et eadem est secundum substanciam in omnibus linguis,
licet accidentaliter varietur....[78]
10. Although the manuscript was circulated in by c. 1555, it was not
published until 1627.[97] It was republished
in the mid-19th century.[98]
11. Malmesbury even notes that "probably some may regard all this as a fiction,
because the vulgar are used to undermine the fame of scholars, saying that the
man who excels in any admirable science, holds converse with the devil"[111] but professes
himself willing to believe the stories about Sylvester because of the
(spurious) accounts he had of the pope's "shameful end".[112]
12. "If revolutionary rational thoughts were expressed in the Age of Reason, they were only
made possible because of the long medieval tradition that established the use
of reason as one of the most important of human activities."[142]
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21. SEP (2013), §2.
22. SEP (2013), Intro..
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24. Hackett (1997),
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78. Hovdhaugen (1990), p. 123.
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External links
· Hackett, Jeremiah. "Roger Bacon". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). Stanford
Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
·
'Roger Bacon' - In Our Time 2017
·
"Roger Bacon". Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
·
"Roger Bacon on
Language". Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
·
Herbermann, Charles, ed.
(1913), "Roger
Bacon" , Catholic Encyclopedia, New York: Robert Appleton Company
· 1901-1906 Jewish
Encyclopedia: Bacon, Roger
· Roger Bacon Quotes at Convergence
·
Roger Bacon: On Experimental Science, 1268
·
O'Connor, John J.; Robertson,
Edmund F., "Roger Bacon", MacTutor History of Mathematics archive, University of St Andrews.
·
Brehm, Edmund A., ″Roger Bacon's Place in the History of Alchemy″
· "Roger-Bacon".
Britannica Encyclopedia.
·
Works by Roger Bacon at LibriVox (public
domain audiobooks)
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