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Created page with "Como Francis Bacon (1561-1626), fue filósofo, estadista, ensayista y un maestro de la literatura. Bacon, que ha sido llamado la mente más grande que jamás produjo Occidente..."
(Created page with "{{Main-es|Francis Bacon|Frabcis Bacon}}")
(Created page with "Como Francis Bacon (1561-1626), fue filósofo, estadista, ensayista y un maestro de la literatura. Bacon, que ha sido llamado la mente más grande que jamás produjo Occidente...")
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{{Main-es|Francis Bacon|Frabcis Bacon}}
{{Main-es|Francis Bacon|Frabcis Bacon}}


As Francis Bacon (1561–1626), he was philosopher, statesman, essayist and literary master. Bacon, who has been called the greatest mind the West ever produced, is known as the father of inductive reasoning and the scientific method, which to a great degree are responsible for the age of technology in which we now live. He foreknew that only applied science could free the masses from human misery and the drudgery of sheer survival in order that they might seek a higher spirituality they once knew.
Como Francis Bacon (1561-1626), fue filósofo, estadista, ensayista y un maestro de la literatura. Bacon, que ha sido llamado la mente más grande que jamás produjo Occidente, es conocido como el padre del razonamiento inductivo y el método científico, cosas que hasta cierto punto son responsables de la era tecnológica en la que vivimos actualmente. Él sabía anticipadamente que sólo la ciencia aplicada podía liberar a las masas de la desgracia humana y el trabajo pesado para la mera supervivencia, con el fin de que pudieran buscar una espiritualidad más alta, que una vez conocieron.


“The Great Instauration” (meaning the great restoration after decay, lapse or dilapidation) was his formula to change “the whole wide world.” He first conceived of the concept as a boy, and when he later crystallized it in his 1607 book by the same name, it launched the English Renaissance.
“The Great Instauration” (meaning the great restoration after decay, lapse or dilapidation) was his formula to change “the whole wide world.” He first conceived of the concept as a boy, and when he later crystallized it in his 1607 book by the same name, it launched the English Renaissance.