Science and political economy in Enlightenment Milan, 1760-1805 2024 - Maddaluno, Lavinia; - Prospero Internet Bookshop

Science and political economy in Enlightenment Milan, 1760-1805 2024
 
Product details:

ISBN13:9781835534045
ISBN10:183553404X
Binding:Paperback
No. of pages:360 pages
Size:234x156 mm
Weight:542 g
Language:English
677
Category:

Science and political economy in Enlightenment Milan, 1760-1805 2024

 
Publisher: Voltaire Foundation
Date of Publication:
 
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Publisher's listprice:
GBP 75.00
Estimated price in HUF:
39 375 HUF (37 500 HUF + 5% VAT)
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Short description:

Focusing on the Habsburg and Napoleonic Duchy of Milan, this book advocates for a shift in perspective from the history of ideas of political economy to the history of scientific practices. It uses this methodological stance to offer a more articulated understanding of how political economic ideas were appropriated in Europe between the late eighteenth and the early nineteenth centuries.

Long description:

This book is about the parlance of political economic ideas with scientific practices in the Duchy of Milan, from the late eighteenth-century Habsburg monarchy to the early nineteenth-century Napoleonic era. It advocates for a shift in perspective from the history of ideas of political economy to the history of scientific practices, as an innovative methodological stance, to offer a more articulated understanding of how political economic ideas circulated and were appropriated in Europe and Milan between the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. In sum, the book asserts that the making and enforcement of political economic ideas into policies could not be possible without the mediation of scientific practices, and draws on a number of concrete examples to substantiate this claim. Following approval, policies had to be tested; tests involved practitioners such as mechanicks, artisans, bakers and land surveyors, alongside institutions. These figures, mostly kept out of the picture of eighteenth-century political economy; built machines to grind grain in a Physiocratic fashion; drained marshes to realise Joseph II?s plans of economic improvement; surveyed abandoned mines as a way to embrace Cameralist conceptions of the state; and wrote chemistry manuals as a celebration of Republican values and models of production. It was these figures, mostly kept out of the picture of eighteenth-century political economy, built machines to grind grain in a Physiocratic fashion; drained marshes to realise Joseph II?s plans of economic improvement; surveyed abandoned mines as a way to embrace Cameralist conceptions of the state; and wrote chemistry manuals as a celebration of Republican values and models of production. More broadly, this book also situates the Duchy of Milan at the centre of European transfers of political economic knowledge, delving into the broad interconnections between ideas and technological practices in the Enlightenment.

Table of Contents:

Acknowledgments

Abbreviations

List of figures

Introduction

Actors

The meaning of scientific practice

Competing traditions in political economy

Scientific practices and political economic reforms

Chapter I

Milling the economy: bread making practices and ersatz in eighteenth-century mila

Landriani as a go-between

Father carrara?s bakery and barraco?s machine

Maize and economic milling

Chapter II

From economic machines to public happiness

Beccaria and the measure of the enlightenment

Pasta, bread making presses and ?intermittent? lumi

Mechanical artefacts and the state

Galilean and cameralist echoes

Chapter III

Perpetuating private property: machines and hydraulics

Miglioramento, language and economia rustica

Castelli?s hydraulics

D?alembert and progress

The ?character of sovereigns?

The ventilatore idraulico

Spaces of political economy: natural history, mineralogy and wealth

Domenico vandelli?s survey of valsassina (1763)

Vandelli?s travel journal: cameralism, curiositas and utilitas

Shifting to mineralogy and the soil

Networks of natural history knowledge

Action, history and projectors

Chapter V

Visions of the soil between enlightened reforms and the napoleonic period

The ispettorato per i nitri e le polveri

From roman to milanese soil

Creating saltpetre expertise

Spaces of rural economy: the soil and its fertility

Conclusion

Starting with grain, ending with the soil

Bibliography

Manuscript sources

Printed sources

Editions of sources

Secondary sources