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Jesuits and the Sciences 1540-1999

  http://www.lib.luc.edu/specialcollections/files/thumbnails/d883853ee25cfadcb252afdf66069481.jpg    http://www.lib.luc.edu/specialcollections/files/thumbnails/003_schott_anatomia_physico,1663_a38eaa51e0.jpg  http://www.lib.luc.edu/specialcollections/files/thumbnails/002_scheiner_disquisitiones_bf56080787.jpg 

A remarkable characteristic of the Society of Jesus during the period of its first founding (1540-1773) was the involvement of its members in the sciences. The reasons for this interest in scientific study can be found in the nature and mission of the order itself. Saint Ignatius Loyola considered the acquisition of knowledge and the performance of mundane labor as spiritually profitable tasks, and this fostered in the Society an action-oriented, utilitarian mentality sympathetic to scientific study. In addition the role of the Society as the "schoolmasters of Europe" meant that the pedagogically (and scientifically) useful principles of rationality, method, and efficiency were highly valued. The tight-knit organization of the Society created among its members habits of cooperation and communication, essential for the gathering and exchange of scientific information. Finally, mission work in Asia and the Americas gave the Jesuits opportunities and impetus to study and record the phenomena of these new worlds.

Credits

Based on a 1996 exhibit in Cudahy Library by Rare Book Cataloger Eric Holzenberg. Online exhibit created by Michael White, Science Librarian, with assistance from Br. Michale Grace, S.J., University Archivist. Updated in 2011 and 2013 by Kathy Young, University Archivist/Curator of Rare Books.