Article ID: CBB001252898

“To Mend the Scheme of Providence”: Benjamin Franklin's Electrical Heterodoxy (2013)

unapi

I suggest in this article that Benjamin Franklin's electrical experiments were naturalistic and reactive towards providential theories of natural harmony and electricity provided by the English experimentalists Stephen Hales, William Watson and Benjamin Wilson. Conceptualizing nature as a divine balance, Franklin rejected English arguments for God's conservation of nature's harmony, suggesting instead that nature had within itself the ability to re-equilibrate when rendered unbalanced. Whilst Franklin's work reveals an experimentally defined fissure between providential and naturalistic views of matter and motion in the mid-eighteenth century, his subsequent reflections on the use of natural philosophy sheds light on the divergent trajectory of utility implicit in these differing views. Hales and Watson in particular believed that insight into nature's providential manifestations gave the natural philosopher a medically restorative role, aligning the power of nature with God's benevolent purpose to heal the infirm. For Franklin, humanity behaved like nature, moving only when necessary. Natural philosophy existed to help these needs, making new worlds that had no dependence on God.

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Authors & Contributors
Generali, Dario
Delbourgo, James
Wrightson, Nick
Tucker, Tom
Schliesser, Eric S.
Nuovo, Victor
Journals
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science
Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society
Perspectives on Science
Perspectives in Biology and Medicine
Notes and Records: The Royal Society Journal of the History of Science
化学史研究 [Kagakushi kenkyū; Journal of the Japanese Society for the History of Chemistry]
Publishers
Mimesis
Editrice Morcelliana
Springer
Random House
PublicAffairs
Oxford University Press
Concepts
Electricity; magnetism
Experiments and experimentation
Natural philosophy
Science and religion
Physics
Philosophy of science
People
Franklin, Benjamin
Hales, Stephen
Clarke, Samuel
Beccaria, Giambattista
Wilson, Benjamin
Spinoza, Baruch
Time Periods
18th century
17th century
21st century
20th century
19th century
Enlightenment
Places
Great Britain
North America
Italy
Europe
United States
France
Institutions
School of Milan
Royal Society of London
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