The New Philosophy and Universal Languages in Seventeenth-century England: Bacon, Hobbes, and Wilkins

Bucknell University Press (1995)
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Abstract

That saving form of knowledge, as it develops in the lines of linguistic thought that extend from Bacon's Instauration to Wilkins's Philosophical Language, is both a product of and one potent agent in producing the emerging, scientistically designed, modern state.

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English politics contra language: the Babel of 1621.Renata Botwina - 2011 - Studies in Logic, Grammar and Rhetoric 24 (37).

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