William Blake, the Single Vision, and Newton's Sleep

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17th century
A01=Keith Davies
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arts and sciences divide
Author_Keith Davies
Blake's Death
Blake's View
Category=N
Category=NHAH
Category=NHTB
Category=PDX
consciousness studies
Deoxyribose Nucleic Acid
Domestic Cat
ecological thought
Emanuel Swedenborg
environmental humanities
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_science
Fourfold Vision
George III
history
history of science
HMS Beagle
Homo Faber
Image Open Access
imagination in scientific progress
Metaphysical Research Programme
Multiple Drafts Model
Newton's Sleep
Nicolas De Condorcet
Philosophy
philosophy of science
Plato's Cave Allegory
Plato's Essentialism
Plato’s Essentialism
poetry analysis
Progress
Purest View
Res Publica
Robin Red Breast
Rothschild Report
science and imagination
Stratified Stability
Ventral Nerve Cord
Vice Versa
William Blake
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032459172
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 27 Jul 2023
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The history and philosophy of scientific ideas and the role poiēsis and imagination play in our understanding of science and progress are widely explored in this book. By examining the views of William Blake and other poets in the context of twentieth-century philosophers Hannah Arendt, Jacob Bronowski, Martin Heidegger, Bruno Latour and Karl Popper, amongst others, the book takes an eclectic approach drawing on examples from biology, history, literature, philosophy and economics, arguing for the reestablishment of imagination as a central attribute of science that may help to resolve some of our most pressing ecological problems as seen in the context of science and technology studies and what is loosely developing into the discipline of environmental humanities.

Today, influential scientists looking at consciousness dismiss imagination regarding it at best as a mere epiphenomenon, a ghost in the machine, or at worst non-existent and to be denied. In this book, Keith G. Davies, who sees C. P. Snow’s debate on the separation of the arts and sciences as alive and well, traces the schism back to Plato but more importantly to the seventeenth century and David Hume’s removal of imagination in the conjunction between our observation of causes and their effects. Through extensive research and use of poetry, this book offers an alternate understanding of science with imagination and its continued significance in today’s world.

This book is an excellent reference book for postgraduate students, professional researchers, William Blake scholars and the pejoratively labelled interested laymen with concerns in ecology and environmental humanities through offering a new perspective on the history of science and the role of imagination within this field.

Keith G. Davies is an associate professor based at the University of Hertfordshire, where he teaches the science of crop protection and plant pathology. Dr Davies has published widely on crop protection in over 80 refereed articles and book chapters and has also been actively involved in public engagement with science. This is his first book that brings together his scientific concerns with his broader cultural and philosophic interests around the relationship between science, the humanities and the nature of progress.

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