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Boyle and Second Sight Boyle and Second Sight
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Boyle’s Legacy Boyle’s Legacy
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Second Sight Debunked Second Sight Debunked
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The Realm of the Imagination The Realm of the Imagination
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Six Second Sight in Scotland: Boyle’S Legacy and its Transformation
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Published:January 2020
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Abstract
This chapter considers changing attitudes during the long eighteenth century to second sight — the uncanny ability of certain individuals to foresee the future — in Scotland. This was a topic which fascinated Boyle in the late seventeenth century. This chapter illustrates how his enquiries on the subject began a tradition of empirical study of the phenomenon which continued into the eighteenth century. But then a change came, and by about 1800 the possibility of second sight was increasingly rejected among English and Scottish intellectuals on the grounds that it was incompatible with the ‘principles’ by which the universe operated. In parallel with this, however, a separate tradition emerged in which second sight and related phenomena were deemed appropriate for imaginative interpretation by poets and others, which is significant in itself.
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