TY - JOUR
T1 - Sounding the Depths of Providence
T2 - Mineral (Re)Generation and Human-Environment Interaction in the Early Modern Period
AU - Luzzini, Francesco
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 History of Earth Sciences Society 1. All rights reserved.
PY - 2020/11/12
Y1 - 2020/11/12
N2 - The genesis and growth of minerals, as well as the existence in ore veins of such organic features as 'seeds', 'matrices', and 'nourishment', remained central and recurrent issues for natural philosophers, technicians, alchemists and practitioners throughout early modern Europe. By providing an overview of the main themes, voices, and concurrent factors (scientific, philosophical, economic, political, cultural, geographical, religious, social) that shaped the evolution of such long-standing dispute, this essay attempts a preliminary analysis of how the early modern understanding of mineral generation influenced our perception of natural exploitability, renewability and exhaustibility-and, more generally, the development of the Earth sciences and the emergence of humans as geological and environmental agents. These issues are also the subject of a new interdisciplinary project which is introduced in the final part of the article and which, hopefully, will be implemented in the next years with the aim to disclose new insights into our comprehension of the human-environment system.
AB - The genesis and growth of minerals, as well as the existence in ore veins of such organic features as 'seeds', 'matrices', and 'nourishment', remained central and recurrent issues for natural philosophers, technicians, alchemists and practitioners throughout early modern Europe. By providing an overview of the main themes, voices, and concurrent factors (scientific, philosophical, economic, political, cultural, geographical, religious, social) that shaped the evolution of such long-standing dispute, this essay attempts a preliminary analysis of how the early modern understanding of mineral generation influenced our perception of natural exploitability, renewability and exhaustibility-and, more generally, the development of the Earth sciences and the emergence of humans as geological and environmental agents. These issues are also the subject of a new interdisciplinary project which is introduced in the final part of the article and which, hopefully, will be implemented in the next years with the aim to disclose new insights into our comprehension of the human-environment system.
KW - Early modern mining
KW - environmental history
KW - mineralogy
KW - natural philosophy
KW - natural resources
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85097232640
U2 - 10.17704/1944-6187-39.2.389
DO - 10.17704/1944-6187-39.2.389
M3 - Article
SN - 0736-623X
VL - 39
SP - 389
EP - 408
JO - Earth Sciences History
JF - Earth Sciences History
IS - 2
ER -