Experimental Science as Epistemic Expansion: New Work for a Theory of the Sublime

In Milena Ivanova & Alice Murphy (eds.), The Aesthetics of Scientific Experiments. New York, NY: Routledge. pp. 155-174 (2023)
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Abstract

Dating back to the early modern theories of Burke and Kant, philosophical accounts have made cognitive failure central to the experience of the sublime. This essay argues for a re-conception of the sublime in terms of the notion of epistemic expansion. Doing so not only provides a plausible account of traditional examples of the sublime, but also provides us with language that can capture an important but neglected aesthetic dimension of experimental science: the expansion of human perception. Recognizing this dimension, it is argued, also enriches our understanding of the ways in which experimental science can facilitate broader public engagement with science.

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Glenn Parsons
Toronto Metropolitan University

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