Diving engines, submarine knowledge and the ‘wealth fetch’d out of the sea’

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Abstract

This article examines the motives for human intervention into the submarine, using the seventeenth‐century diving engine to consider the epistemic and economic incentives for venturing under water. It shows how diving engines and other underwater technologies were imbued with the associated promises of gaining new submarine knowledge as well as the quest for retrieving precious materials from the bottom of the sea. Setting diving engines against learned attitudes towards the submarine and the challenges of experience in knowledge‐making, it moves to consider the external, commercial influences on the experimental philosopher and the consequences this has for notions of disinterestedness. It argues that diving engines should be understood within the pursuits of both knowledge and profit, for the submarine, like the subterranean, was an environment to be both studied and exploited.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)78-94
Number of pages17
JournalRenaissance Studies
Volume34
Issue number1
Early online date15 Jul 2019
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Feb 2020

Keywords

  • disinterestedness
  • Diving engines
  • knowledge
  • profit
  • submarine

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