Resumo:
This work is grounded in the relevance of Francis Bacon’s oeuvre and thought to the History of Science — evident in the vitality, contemporaneity, and wide-reaching impact of his work. By defending experience as an essential stage of knowledge, Bacon introduced a decisive break with the Aristotelian model. For him, true science required a rigorous, methodical, and progressive process based on controlled observation and systematic experimentation. This emphasis on the experimental method anticipated core elements of what would later become the modern scientific method. His philosophy of science foreshadowed many of the foundational principles of scientific knowledge that would only be consolidated later. In Bacon’s view, objectivity does not consist in a direct correspondence between subject and world, but rather in a progressive achievement — one that results from the elimination of the mind’s biases and the systematic reorganization of experience. It is not merely a matter of accumulating empirical data, but a deliberate effort to purify the understanding, involving the suspension of hasty judgments and the control of subjective inclinations. Among his main contributions are: the formulation of the inductive method; the defense of knowledge as a collective and progressive effort; the emphasis on organization and planning in scientific activity; and the proposal of a natural and experimental history capable of integrating the description of nature with technical mastery over it — in favor of improving the human condition.