Through an examination of the Opus maius, Roger Bacons great scientific work of 1267, this book offers insight into Bacons understanding of the role of science in society and the study and practice of science in the later Middle Ages.
Through an examination of the Opus maius, Roger Bacons great scientific work of 1267, this book offers insight into Bacons understanding of the role of science in society and the study and practice of science in the later Middle Ages.
Written at the request of Pope Clement IV (d. 1268), the Opus maius contains English Franciscan and polymath Roger Bacons plans for educational and ecclesiastical reform through the study of arts and sciences, which Bacon saw as having been neglected in the curricula of the major European universities. In writing the Opus maius, Bacon wanted to demonstrate that not only were the sciences a solid foundation for learning theology, but they could also improve society and help mankind attain salvation. This volume contains nine essays on the sciences Bacon thought were most important in this scheme, including optics, mathematics, astronomy, alchemy, medicine, and experimental science. Each provides a focused examination of the individual sciences, demonstrating how Bacon understood and practiced them, as well as how he envisioned they would fit together into his larger program of scientific reform.
This thought-provoking collection will be a valuable resource to historians of science, medicine, and philosophy, as well as those in medieval and premodern studies.
The Opus maius: A Plea for Reform
1. Roger Bacons Scientia
Experimentalis: A Review of Bacons diverse Treatises
2. The Division of the
Sciences in Opus maius IV, 1, 2: Roger Bacons Sources and Their
Transformation
3. The Science of Weights: Jordan of Nemores Influence on
Roger Bacons Scientific Method
4. Roger Bacon and John Pecham on the Nature
and Role of Arithmetic
5. On Vision: Roger Bacons Opus maius (V.12) from
the perspective of Alhazens Optics (III)
6. Roger Bacon on Mathematics,
Perspectiva and Astrology: The Unnamed Master Revisited
7. Knowability and
Power of Ars: Roger Bacons Utopian Science as Anti-Magic
8. Alchemy and
Pharmacology in the Opus maius
9. Roger Bacon and Secrecy: Alchemical
Techniques of Deception and the Doctor Mirabilis
Meagan S. Allen is a historian of science, specializing in the medical alchemy of the later Middle Ages. Her research interests lie at the intersection of alchemy, pharmacology, and theology, especially in the writings of the 13th century polymath Roger Bacon. She is the author of Roger Bacon and the Incorruptible Human: Alchemy, Pharmacology, and the Desire to Prolong Life (2023), which examines Bacons desire to use alchemy to create a medicine that would extend human life by centuries. Allen is currently a Visiting Assistant Professor in the Department of the History of Science and Technology at Johns Hopkins University, USA.