Review "By untangling the 'epistemic culture' of the early modern Spanish global monarchy, Crawford offers a sweeping counternarrative to any simplified account of the rise of scientific modernity as a tool of empire...Crawford shatters the Spanish Black Legend. The Andean Wonder Drug fully brings to light a Spanish Empire that was constitutionally far more tolerant of epistemic diversity than, say, the British, largely because the former never developed a simpleminded discourse of scientific 'objectivity' as modernity that the latter did. There were many other ways of living the Enlightenment than those the historiography narrowly peddles." - Jorge Cañizares-Esguerra in Isis: A Journal of the History of Science Society2017 Murdo J. MacLeod Book Prize, Honorable Mention, Latin America/Caribbean Section of the Southern Historical Association Read more About the Author Matthew James Crawford is associate professor of history at Kent State University. Read more
ترست بايلوت
منذ يوم واحد
منذ يومين