| Author/Contributor(s): | Potter, Elizabeth |
| Publisher: | Indiana University Press |
| Date: | 04/22/2001 |
| Binding: | Paperback |
| Condition: | NEW |
Elizabeth Potter argues that even good science is sometimes influenced by such issues, and she shows that the work leading to the Gas Law, while certainly based on physical evidence, was also shaped by class and gendered considerations. At issue were two descriptions of nature, each supporting radically different visions of class and gender arrangements. Boyle's Law rested on mechanistic principles, but Potter shows us an alternative law based on hylozooic principles (the belief that all matter is animated), whose adherents challenged social stability and the status quo in 17th-century England.