Working Paper

Toward Understanding 17th Century English Culture: A Structural Topic Model of Francis Bacon's Ideas

Peter Grajzl, Peter Murrell
CESifo, Munich, 2017

CESifo Working Paper No. 6443

We use machine-learning methods to study the features and origins of the ideas of Francis Bacon, a key figure who contributed to the intellectual roots of a cultural paradigm that spurred modern economic development. Bacon’s works are the data in an estimation of a structural topic model, a state-of-the-art methodology for analysis of text corpora. The estimates uncover sixteen topics prominent in Bacon’s opus. Two are key elements of the ideas usually associated with Bacon—inductive epistemology and fact-seeking. The utilitarian promise of science and the centralized organization of the scientific quest, embraced by Bacon’s followers, were not emphasized by him. We provide the first quantitative evidence that the genesis of Bacon’s epistemology lies in his experience in the common-law. Combining our findings with accepted arguments in the existing literature, we suggest that the effects of common-law culture can help explain the coincidence of political and economic development in England.

CESifo Category
Empirical and Theoretical Methods
Labour Markets
Keywords: Francis Bacon, culture, England, law, knowledge, scientific method
JEL Classification: B310, Z100, C550, N730, K100, P100