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- Title
Silver refining in the New World: A singularity in the history of useful knowledge.
- Authors
Guerrero, Saul; Pretel, David
- Abstract
Historians have thoroughly documented the development of mercury-based silver refining in Spanish America in the late sixteenth century, and its use for over 300 years on an industrial scale unknown in Europe. However, we currently lack any consensus about the significance of this technology in the global history of knowledge. This article critically reassesses the invention and improvement of this refining method with the aim of addressing two interrelated issues. Firstly, how experiential knowledge and practical skills in silver refining were deliberately harnessed to solve a specific technical problem. Secondly, how economic incentives and patronage set the stage for empirical practices and a collaborative culture that facilitated the widespread use of this novel technique. In so doing, this article places silver refining within the theoretical constructs and historiography of useful knowledge, and bridges narratives that have remained largely isolated.
- Subjects
AMERICA; PATRONAGE; WORLD history; SILVER; HISTORY of technology; MONETARY incentives; SIXTEENTH century
- Publication
History of Science, 2024, Vol 62, Issue 2, p175
- ISSN
0073-2753
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1177/00732753231185027