In the eighteenth century, a widely investigated – and even fashionable – field of knowledge is natural history, a macro-domain including a vast number of disciplines and sub-disciplines. Most of these are emerging disciplines not because they are completely new, but because the research perspective adopted (i.e., the way they are investigated and discussed) is extremely innovative. On the one hand, cognate disciplines such as materia medica, diaetetica, agriculture, gardening, botany, etc. – considered as ‘part of’ and ‘dependent on’ the more prestigious and encompassing domains of medicine and natural history – establish themselves as autonomous disciplines with their own epistemological principles and values. On the other hand, new disciplinary communities originate and consolidate in an ideal ‘commonwealth of learning’. One of the branches which best represents the ‘commonwealth of learning’ and its civil and utilitarian issues is botany. On botanical knowledge are based most of the eighteenth-century commercial interests and principles regulating global and colonial trade; moreover, it is considered the main source of individual wealth, national welfare and cultural renown. As a consequence, botany acts as a bridge towards other disciplines, other settings, other peoples, other countries, other traditions and, ultimately, other knowledge(s). In the present study, the focus is on the contribution made by such Swedish scholars as Carl Linnaeus and Fredrik Hasselquist to the elaboration of modern botany, both at a theoretical and at a practical level.

Scandinavian scientific learning in Eighteenth-Century British Writing: Linnaeus and the European outlook on nature / E. Lonati (DI/SEGNI). - In: Bridges to Scandinavia / [a cura di] A. Meregalli, C. Storskog. - Prima edizione. - Milano : Ledizioni, 2016 Jun. - ISBN 9788867054121. - pp. 71-91

Scandinavian scientific learning in Eighteenth-Century British Writing: Linnaeus and the European outlook on nature

E. Lonati
2016

Abstract

In the eighteenth century, a widely investigated – and even fashionable – field of knowledge is natural history, a macro-domain including a vast number of disciplines and sub-disciplines. Most of these are emerging disciplines not because they are completely new, but because the research perspective adopted (i.e., the way they are investigated and discussed) is extremely innovative. On the one hand, cognate disciplines such as materia medica, diaetetica, agriculture, gardening, botany, etc. – considered as ‘part of’ and ‘dependent on’ the more prestigious and encompassing domains of medicine and natural history – establish themselves as autonomous disciplines with their own epistemological principles and values. On the other hand, new disciplinary communities originate and consolidate in an ideal ‘commonwealth of learning’. One of the branches which best represents the ‘commonwealth of learning’ and its civil and utilitarian issues is botany. On botanical knowledge are based most of the eighteenth-century commercial interests and principles regulating global and colonial trade; moreover, it is considered the main source of individual wealth, national welfare and cultural renown. As a consequence, botany acts as a bridge towards other disciplines, other settings, other peoples, other countries, other traditions and, ultimately, other knowledge(s). In the present study, the focus is on the contribution made by such Swedish scholars as Carl Linnaeus and Fredrik Hasselquist to the elaboration of modern botany, both at a theoretical and at a practical level.
No
English
botany; natural history; encyclopaedias; eighteenth century; Scandinavian; British; European; learning; Linnaeus; Hasselquist
Settore L-LIN/12 - Lingua e Traduzione - Lingua Inglese
Capitolo o Saggio
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
Ricerca di base
Pubblicazione scientifica
Bridges to Scandinavia
A. Meregalli, C. Storskog
Prima edizione
Milano
Ledizioni
giu-2016
71
91
21
9788867054121
15
Volume a diffusione internazionale
Aderisco
E. Lonati
Book Part (author)
reserved
268
Scandinavian scientific learning in Eighteenth-Century British Writing: Linnaeus and the European outlook on nature / E. Lonati (DI/SEGNI). - In: Bridges to Scandinavia / [a cura di] A. Meregalli, C. Storskog. - Prima edizione. - Milano : Ledizioni, 2016 Jun. - ISBN 9788867054121. - pp. 71-91
info:eu-repo/semantics/bookPart
1
Prodotti della ricerca::03 - Contributo in volume
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/442855
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