Vera Keller is Professor of History at the University of Oregon. She holds particular interests in the emergence of experimental science and the connections between scientific research and capitalism, colonialism, and political economy. Keller is the author of Knowledge and the Public Interest, 1575–1725 (2015) and The Interlopers: Early Stuart Projects and the Undisciplining of Knowledge (2023).
'Keller is a masterful guide through the thickets of late 17th-century German academic culture and its colorful characters, collections, and publications. She traces the origins of research to this lost world, where curiosity and freedom from external interference allowed a shifting set of disciplines to form and in ways that proved seminal to the Enlightenment.' Ann Blair, Harvard University 'This is a bold, eye-opening book that debunks long-held prejudices about pedantic 'baroque' scholarship and the backwardness of 17th-century German science. Instead, it tells a whole new story: that of the 'experimental century', in which new, fluid changes are made in the knowledge system, and in which there is no contradiction between corpuscular physics, museum facilities and extensive citation practices.' Martin Mulsow, University of Erfurt