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               Published in 1858 by John W. Parker & Son, Novum Organon Renovatum by William Whewell forms the second part of his monumental Philosophy of the Inductive Sciences. Drawing inspiration from Francis Bacon's original Novum Organum, Whewell refines and extends the Baconian method for the scientific age of the nineteenth century. His work systematically examines how knowledge is formed through induction, emphasizing the process by which general laws emerge from empirical observation. Through detailed philosophical reasoning, he explores the "colligation of facts" and the role of ideas as organizing principles in the advancement of science, blending philosophy with methodology in a way that profoundly influenced later thinkers in both the sciences and humanities.
              
             
             
              
               
              
             
             
              
               This edition reflects Whewell's mature thought, presenting a synthesis of scientific logic, epistemology, and moral philosophy. It offers an eloquent defence of rational empiricism at a time when science was rapidly professionalizing, situating the work as a cornerstone of Victorian intellectual history. Novum Organon Renovatum would appeal to collectors of early scientific philosophy, historians of thought, and admirers of the intellectual legacy of the British scientific revolution.
              
             
             
              
               
              
             
             
              
               William Whewell (1794 - 1866) was one of the most important and influential figures in nineteenth-century Britain. Whewell, a polymath, wrote extensively on numerous subjects, including mechanics, mineralogy, geology, astronomy, political economy, theology, educational reform, international law, and architecture, as well as the works that remain the most well-known today in philosophy of science, history of science, and moral philosophy. He was one of the founding members and a president of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, a fellow of the Royal Society, president of the Geological Society, and longtime Master of Trinity College, Cambridge.
              
             
             
              
               
              
             
             
              
               In his own time his influence was acknowledged by the major scientists of the day, such as John Herschel, Charles Darwin, Charles Lyell and Michael Faraday, who frequently turned to Whewell for philosophical and scientific advice, and, interestingly, for terminological assistance. Whewell invented the terms "anode," "cathode," and "ion" for Faraday.
              
             
             
              
               "natural philosopher" and "man of science". Whewell was greatly influenced by his association with three of his fellow students at Cambridge: Charles Babbage, John Herschel, and Richard Jones. Over the winter of 1812 and spring of 1813, the four met for what they called "Philosophical Breakfasts" at which they discussed induction and scientific method. For the next 50 years these friends remained in contact, developing their view of inductive reasoning and applying it in diverse realms."