“For the iatromechanists, life was movement; for Bordeu, life is sensitivity.” (Moravia, 1978, p55). This quote is not yet meaningful maybe, nonetheless it describes a change in the thinking not only about life but mostly about man himself. Nowadays, all kinds of scientific expertises are present. There are for example the exact sciences and also the social sciences, but it wasn’t always that way. The science of man did not appear until the eighteenth century. In this paper the relationship between the Scientific Revolution and the emergence of the science of man is examined. First an overview of certain developments that illustrate the relation will be given, followed by a discussion of the different aspects mentioned, and finally there will be a short conclusion .
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