Materials and Expertise in Early Modern Europe
Between Market and Laboratory
It is often assumed that natural philosophy was the forerunner of early modern natural sciences. But where did these sciences' systematic observation and experimentation get their starts? In "Materials and Expertise in Early Modern Europe", the laboratories, workshops, and marketplaces emerge as arenas where hands-on experience united with higher learning. In an age when chemistry, mineralogy, geology, and botany intersected with mining, metallurgy, pharmacy, and gardening, materials were objects that crossed disciplines.
Here, the contributors tell the stories of metals, clay, gunpowder, pigments, and foods, and thereby demonstrate the innovative practices of technical experts, the development of the consumer market, and the formation of the observational and experimental sciences in the early modern period".Materials and Expertise in Early Modern Europe" showcases a broad variety of forms of knowledge, from ineffable bodily skills and technical competence to articulated know-how and connoisseurship, from methods of measuring, data gathering, and classification to analytical and theoretical knowledge. By exploring the hybrid expertise involved in the making, consumption, and promotion of various materials, and the fluid boundaries they traversed, the book offers an original perspective on important issues in the history of science, medicine, and technology.
About the Author
Ursula Klein is senior research scholar at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science and the co-author of "Materials in Eighteenth-Century Science: A Historical Ontology" and the author of "Experiment, Models, Paper Tools: Cultures of Organic Chemistry in the Nineteenth Century".
E. C. Spary is lecturer in the history of eighteenth-century medicine at the Wellcome Trust for the History of Medicine at University College, London, and author of "Utopia's Garden: French Natural History from Old Regime to Revolution", also published by the University of Chicago Press.
Reviews
"A very valuable addition to the history of matter. A fascinating and thought-provoking range of studies of mundane substances as lures to consumption, commerce, warfare and science" – Andrew Pickering, University of Exeter