A new, illustrated source, �Drebbel�s Description of his Circulating Oven,� sheds light on the thermostatic oven of Cornelis Drebbel (1572-1633), a Dutch alchemist, engineer, and philosopher active in Holland, Zeeland, London and Prague. The �Description� survives in two German copies. It describes two new inventions, a �Judicium� (which we might call a thermometer) and a �Regimen� (which we might call a feedback control mechanism).
It thus engages longstanding debates concerning the invention of the thermometer. More fundamentally, it engages the relationship of artisanality and philosophy. The �Description� highlights the entangled origins of both instruments, which emerged through combined concerns of alchemy, engineering, philosophy, and natural magic. In the early seventeenth century, the term �thermometer� indicated an object with a more expansive role than it later would. The later emergence of a distinct scientific instrument industry, separating previously entangled roles, has colored subsequent views of such instruments and their makers.
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