• contempt for the uses of modern natural philosophy

    Mary Shelley seems to understand with acuity a phenomenon that could only have just
    come into general awareness in her time. We now recognize that a paradigm shift had
    occured in the previous generation, one forcing the "life sciences" into a disciplinary
    partnership with the physical sciences. From that point forward all notions of distinct
    animistic or quasi-magical differences separating them disappear. Furthermore, under
    this conceptual format nineteenth-century scientific inquiry increasingly reduces
    the processes of life themselves to merely chemical reactions.