Activation and Alignment: A Causal Account of the Scientific Revolution

Abstract

Standard historiographical approaches to the Scientific Revolution illuminate background conditions but leave three puzzles unresolved: what triggered the initial escalation of inherited tensions, what made early investigative efforts durable, and why natural philosophy became the locus of transformation rather than theology, law, or classical scholarship. This paper develops a causal account by identifying the mechanisms of activation at the individual level and the institutional alignment that converted rare psychological drive into durable research traditions. The trigger architecture operates at two levels. At the individual level, activation occurs when investigators experience inherited puzzles as psychologically intolerable; capture stabilizes inquiry through cognitive, material, and social entanglements; and externalization converts methods into transmissible forms. At the institutional level, role expansion embeds elevated standards into positions; succession ratchets prevent regression through competitive selection; and domain channeling directs institutional energy toward particular fields. A systematic comparison across Islamic, Chinese, and European cases demonstrates that each component is necessary, but none is sufficient on its own. The Scientific Revolution occurred when all components aligned at Padua-Venice and Oxford-London, where corporate autonomy, competitive appointments, and state patronage converged with investigative practices. The Galileo case provides decisive evidence: his selective activation across domains demonstrates that activation operates as a specific mechanism rather than a stable dispositional trait.

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