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3 - Science writing and writing science: Boyle and rhetorical theory

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 December 2009

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But I think it will be convenient to make the very first words of the English account itself I sent you, to be preceded by a long stroke in the same line, to intimate that the letter did not begin there; lest, without such intimation, the beginning may appear either too abrupt, or not so civil to you, as I desire my writings should be thought, as well as be.

But besides the unintentional deficiencies of my style, I have knowingly and purposely transgressed the laws of oratory in one particular, namely in making sometimes my periods or parentheses over-long: … I chose rather to neglect the precepts of rhetoricians, than the mention of those things, which I thought pertinent to my subject, and useful to you, my reader.

The tercentenary of Robert Boyle's death was commemorated by historians and philosophers of science, not by literary scholars. Since an important dimension of Boyle's career was literary, such neglect is surprising. Part of the reason for this neglect may be the textual and bibliographical limitations of the Birch edition, which makes Boyle seem like a writer of the mid-eighteenth century rather than a contemporary of Sir Thomas Browne, John Milton and John Dryden.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1994

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