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Late seventeenth-century natural philosophers inherited the conjunction of politics and science at the core of Francis Baconâs experimental project. Thomas Spratâs The History of the Royal Society, Margaret Cavendishâs The Blazing World, and Jonathan Swiftâs Gulliverâs Travels use the conventions of literary knowledge to express their scientific-political visions, insisting that natural philosophy cannot be understood apart from the political institutions enabling and enabled by its practice and promulgation. These writers use the experimental imagination to envisage, in turn, civil government, absolutist monarchy, and imperialism. Sprat advances scientific triumphalism and a model for schooling gentlemen into civil society.