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Blazing World was originally published as a conjoined text along with Cavendish's Observations on Experimental Philosophy, which was a direct response to scientist Robert Hooke's Micrographia which was published only a year before. Advances in the field of science and philosophy in the early modern period had a huge influence on Cavendish and were a major component of The Descriptions of a New World, Called the Blazing World [1]. This influence can be seen directly in Blazing World, with nearly half the book consisting of descriptions of the Blazing World, its people, philosophies, and inventions. One of these inventions is a microscope, which Cavnedish critiques alongside the experimental method itself in the Blazing World [2]. This integration of scientific advances could be one of the reasons Blazing World is considered by some to be the first sic-fi novel.

  1. ^ Keller, Eve (1997). "Producing Petty Gods: Margaret Cavendish's Critique of Experimental Science". Project Muse. 64: 447–471.
  2. ^ Borlik, Todd (2008). Philosophies of Technology: Francis Bacon and his Contemporaries. pp. 231–250. ISBN 9789047442318.