Homepage1.the Early Spring Of Science[1]

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INTRODUCTION In 1743 the Norwegian-Danish government distributes a questionaire to all the government officials. The answers from Norway consists of 172 pieces. The main topic of the questionaire is topography. This, together with other contemporary sources, the main topic of the paper conveys the way of thinking): the mentality of the time. This discourse was delivered at Congressgebouw, den Haag, at the European Social Science History Conference in May 1996. The publication of the questionnaire was finished in five volumes by Christmas 2008. THE EARLY SPRING OF SCIENCE A topographical investigation in early modern times ”The 43 questions” In 1743 the Danish-Norwegian government distributed a questionaire to all government officials. 43 questions were to be answered. As the clergy was reckoned to be the learned class, the questionaire was also sent on to the clergy all the way from the bishops to the vicars. The answers from bailiffs of the time, however, also show a sound knowledge of the topics in question. Some of the descriptions are missing today, but we still have 172 left. They will be published in five or six volumes at The compartment of sources, The national archives of Norway. Volume I comes in the end of this year 2003, if everything go as planned. The original intention of the questionaire at the time was to collect material for a 9-volumes work on norwegian circumstances, a socalled topographical work. Only one volume saw daylight. The questions are open, that means, they state the subject of interest, but leave it much to the interviewee to formulate the answers and give details. The answers consequently bear the stamp of the officials personality and in a body give an impression of what occupied the wellbred, cultured and educated class in the early 18th century. The subject matter is in other words a piece of history of learning in this springtime of enlightenment. Seen in this way the questionaire shows a change of pattern in way of thought. Change of way of thought It seems that at this time there was a feeling of change almost like the one we have in our times: Lots of changes in a relatively short time. In the introduction to his work The first attempt of the natural history of Norway, printed in 1752, the bishop of Bergen, Erik Pontoppidan, states: Our time has had the great advantage to see from the beginning of this century the progress of science caused by more important discoveries than many of the earlier secula seen together.

A short view of the previous world of thought shows: In the middle ages, roughly, the universe was seen as not understandable for man. It was subject to the great wisdom and unscrutableness of God – or the intermediation of the devil, inscrutable that too. The church, only, had the right to state how the world was built and how it functioned. People were subjected to believe in a symbolic and hierachical order of the world. A more down - to - earth inquiring attitude to the surroundings was suppressed. But, however, the map seemed to differ from the real world. Slowly, slowly, with many reactions and setbacks (the new thoughts were, of course, seen as dangerous, devastating and disintegrating on society), one worked towards a new understanding, also thanks to the Arabic learned world. Slowly the new thoughts were accepted all over. The project of the 43 questions shows that the thoughts of the renaissance became common amongst the educated in Denmark-Norway too. The nature was no longer symbolic and hierarchical. God was really present. God was the reason for dealing with science. And science was dealt with. Getting to learn the nature was the way to get to know the creation of God and God himself. The bishop Erik Pontoppidan continues: See, there is a God, … though he, that lives in an unaccessible light, and can not be seen by the eye of an ordinary mortal, however, the mind sees and experiences him in his acts. And God’s acts were the world of reality, a down-to-earth conception of our surroundings. By studying the real world, we learned Housekeeping, the Housekeeping of God, and the Housekeeping of man. The Housekeeper and Housekeeping The Housekeeper and Housekeeping were important and much used concepts. Erik Pontoppidan, in the preface to his work The first attempt …, mentions God’s Housekeeping with the physical world, with the stars, the fishes, the birds, the plants, God’s houskeeping with the place, and God as the great Housekeeper of it all. And so the researchers fell upon science in small and in big. They observed and collected and systematized and gave names to the fishes, the birds, the fishes, the plants, the stars, every subject of nature. The interests went further than to register the animal kingdom, the plant kingdom and the mineral kingdom. The beginning of a social sciencewas studied: How people lived, how they organized, what they ate, earlier and contemporary ways of living, trade and industry, history and lingvistics and ways of production were discussed. We see, the beginning of the science of nutrition. Also subjects that presently might be unknown were taken into consideration. Only the theology was left alone, as stated in the first volume of the first edition of the Copenhagen society’s volumes: Also subjects that might be unknown to the society were taken into consideration. Only the theology was left alone, as stated in the first volume of the first edition of the Copenhagen society’s volumes:

.. Except the theology, unless the study concerns philology or church-history in the holy bible. Everything belonged in a greater connexion, in the houskeeping of God. Underlying was the hope that when everything was found, then Gods whole world would be fully understood. The whole and the part Consequently the whole and the part and the role of the part in the wholeness were importent. The whole and the part were related to each other as a chinese box containing uncountable rooms - or a beehive or a composite of the both, if such is imaginable. And there was a sense of democracy through it all, with due regard to real knowledge. We are all builders and contributors to the wholeness. The learning of nature or natural history it was called. Towards a later time these descriptions are called topographical. This word was not so much in use by this time – at least in Norway. One used several different words, but the concern was descriptions of the place in the widest conception. The place was seen as a whole with all the parts interacting. The Place Ideally each place was a unit containing everything those who lived there needed and themselves and their habitat. An example: On one of the questions concerning herbs and deceases, one of the officials answered: I think that God has given each and every place the herbs they need to cure or relieve any decease they might have. In spite of years of hunger, in 1740 to 1742, or may be because of them, one believed in God’s reason and order, God’s plan. It was man’s duty to find this reason and this order and his plan. God has created the world in such a way that ideally each place should contain people enough to live from what the place could offer, or said in the opposite way: There should be resources enough in each place so that the people in that place could live. Therefore it is man’s duty to study the creation in order to understand Gods Housekeeping. Each phenomenon had to be studied apart on each place. God’s plan was fundamentally the same everywhere, but creation was infinitely rich with local variations in countless combinations. This made it necessary to understand difference. Each environment, each part had its duty and contributed to the whole. The Journey The journey got a special meaning in this context. The journey gave a continuous experience of places and their difference. There was an obligation to tell others about it afterwards, very often in print. There are quite a few books of travel from this time. The mathematical - scientific method

The enthusiasm and optimism of the time can be felt, it is almost touchable. The project was to see, count, measure, weigh, so that others, by doing the same, could come to the same results. There the mathematical-scientific method started. There was a great joy and optimism in the work and a great joy of the results. Everything could be found out! The world could be fully understood. Well, God and his world was the ultimate reason for this research. But God himself and spirit was above. The spiritual world was put aside. God, and the thinking and conscious man were not condemned to be non-existing. In the opposite, Descartes, for instance, showed the existence of God and of the spirit in man. But, as i have understood, Descartes learned that spirit could not be weighed or measured or counted, and could therefore not be subject to science. The learned societies, the academies Well, back to the officials and the clergy and their answerson the questions of 1743. Their inspired occupation with the real world led to – and by time got – their background in the learned societies. The university of Copenhagen didn’t function well at the time. In 1728 it simply burned down. Things like that happen. The new occupations with natural history led to a demand for contact with others of the same interests, ways of communication. The beginning of The society of Copenhagen in 1742 and its activities is one of the factors that created the professional environment that made possible the questionaire of the 43 questions. The later bishop in Bergen, Erich Pontoppidan was among the seven learned members who constituted The Copenhagen society for the lovers of learning and branches of knowledge. The members were well established and learned personalities in the danish and international academic life. The members met weekly in the home of the preses, the lord Johan Ludvig Holstein for discussions and reading of papers to each other. The members especially, had an obligation to contribute with their papers for discussion and publishing. All interested, members or not, were invited to send in papers. Francis Bacon was the great inspirer and giver of ideas. His idea was that all the branches of knowledge should not be used for a narrow egoistical or economical purpose. In the learned societies all the results should be made accessible for the public. The Copenhagen society followed, as we can see, this concept. The Copenhagen society’s publications started in 1745. The academy was modelled on academies elsewhere in Europe, created as a consequence of the thoughts of the renaissance. At last the renaissance came to us living up in the north. Pontoppidan states the importance of the inspiration of such learned societies: To the progress of the history of nature have almost in all the countries of Europe nowadays, flourishing learned societies been of great help, by mutual encouragement, instruction, caution, careful opposition, visitors, experiments, and the communication of their finished thesis to common knowledge by yearly publications.

Foreign or national language? There was an interesting discussion: should the publishing be in danish, to serve the native interests, or in latin to make use of the communication abroad. In the preface to the first volume of the Copenhagen periodical publications it is stated that the prints will be in danish, because the works mainly concerned domestic subjects. The writers were also well learned in latin and european languages, they had access to the many foreign models. The nearest was the swedish academy’s periodical publication that was so renowned and loved, that people elsewere in Europe learned swedish to be able to read the papers published there in the original language. The swedish papers were also translated and published in Germany, France and Italy. The learned societies contributed to make scientific papers open to the public. Otherwise it very often took a year and a day before things like that were printed, or the manuscripts suffered fire or were not published at all. There was also the censorship on printed matters to take into consideration. Anyhow: The enthusiasm was the case by us and was also the case elsewhere in Europe. There was all in all a lively, enthusiastic activity inside and over the borders. I want to take a big jump to our circumstances today, and give An afterthought or a dream for the future? We can look back upon three centuries of research. In the course of the renaissance we gradually left a symbolic worldview and established a worldview of reason and rationality. In the course of these centuries the scientific research on the material part of our world has been predominant, and, as we have seen, they have altered our way of living tremendously, mostly for good, I will only dwell on the good. The topographical investigations were an important part of the starting of this in Norway. The topographical descriptions concerned God’s presence in the material world, both spirit and matter. When everything was mapped and everything understood, the hope was that maybe man could understand, if not God himself, then perhaps the nature of God. God and spirit covered no weight or plane or room, wherefore they were outside the possibilities of research. Towards our time we have seen that the spiritual part of us and of the world is situated between romanticism and a disacknowledgement that such a part of the world exsists. For a time it became out of focus for the possibilities and interest of science. God’s presence, spirituality, was no longer a theme. Nowadays there is knowledge present that through the physics, chemistry and mathematics one can suggest that a spiritual world exists. Solid matter is mostly emptyness, according to Einstein, as i have understood, round an energypattern. This is the case with humans too. The observation of the elementary particles itself may change the results in the way the observer expects. Or, said in another way: the univers seems to consist of pure energy that changes according to man’s intention and expectation.

Bibliography Breve fra Hans Gram 1685-1748, ed. by Herman Gram, Kjøbenhavn 1907. Dass, Peter, Beskrivelse over Nordlands amt or Nordlands trompet, Bergen 1739, 2. ed. Kiøbenhavn 1763, (in all 46 editions). Djupedal, Reidar, Den store innsamlinga av topografisk, historisk og språklig tilfang 1743 og "Det Kongerige Norge", Heimen, bd. X , 1955-57. de Fine, Bendix Christian, Stavanger amptes udførlige beskrivelse, første utgave ved N. Nicolaysen i Norske magasin ii, 1870, 2. ed.: Vitskapleg kildeutgåve ed. by Per Thorson, Stavanger 1952, 3rd edition by Rogaland historie og ættesogelag, Stavanger 1952. Faggot, Jac., Tankar om fäderneslandets känning och beskrifwande in Kongl. Swenska wetenskaps academiens handlingar för månaderna januar, februar ock martius 1741, Stockholm 1743. Imsen, Steinar og Harald Winge, Norsk historisk leksikon, Oslo 1988. Jessen-Schardebøll, Erich Johan, Det Kongerige Norge fremstillet efter dets naturlige og borgerlige tilstand, tome 1, Kiøbenhavn 1763. Jøcher, Christian Gottlieb, Allgemeines gelehrten lexicon aller stände sowohl männ- als weiblichen geschlechtes [etc.], Leipzig 1750. Kuhn,Thomas S., The structure of scientific revolutions, s.i. 1962. Lindroth, Sten, Kungl. Svenska Vetenskapsakademiens Historia, Stockholm 1967. Pontoppidan, Erik, Danske Atlas,Kiøbenhavn 1763. Pontoppidan, Erik, Det første forsøg paa Norges Naturlige Historie, forestillende dette kongeriges luft, grund, fielde, vande,væxter, metaller, mineralier, steen-arter, dyr, fugle, fiske og omsider indbyggernes naturell, samt sædvaner og levemaade, Kiøbenhavn 1752. Pontoppidan, Erik, Sandhed til gudfrygtighed, Kiøbenhavn 1737. Ramus,Jjonas, Norriges Beskrivelse, Kjøbenhavn 1715. Robinson-Sheares, Dictionary of National biography, Oxford, London 1909, ed. By Sidney Lee. Salmon,Tthomas, The Universal Traveller or, a complete description of the several nations of the world, London 1752. SAO, Akershus stiftamt, div. Pakkesaker, pakke 23. Schnitler, Peter, grenseeksaminasjonsprotokoller 1742-1745, kjeldeskriftfondet, ved Lars Ivar Hansen og Tom Schmidt, Oslo 1985. Skrifter som udi det Kjøbenhavnske Selskab af lærdoms og videnskabers elskere [etc.] Kjøbenhavn 1745. Lindroth, Sten, Svenska Vetenskapsakademiens Historia, Stockholm 1967. Topographisk journal bd. 1 og 9, Chistiania 1792-1805. Wille, Hans Jacob, Beskrivelse over Sillejords præstegield, Kiøbenhavn 1786.

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