"Girten demonstrates, thoroughly and convincingly, that materialism constituted an alternative conception of early science to the mainstream, Baconian view. This is an important book, very much part of one of the central conversations currently unfolding in science and literature studies."—Jess Keiser, Tufts University "Sensitive Witnesses is a fluently written and well-researched study that moves nimbly between philosophical sources and a wide range of literary genres to enrich our understanding of Enlightenment ways of knowing."—Sarah Tindal Kareem, University of California, Los Angeles "A figure for our own time, Girten's sensitive witness emerges as the unashamed hero of a history of scientific passions."—Wendy Anne Lee, New York University "Girten illuminates Enlightenment thinkers who utilized 'sublime knowledge-making and sensitive witnessing' to 'develop an appreciation for their continuity with the material world.' She also connects the Enlightenment past to the present, calling for 'a new, sensitive, "great instauration" in which we learn how to touch and be touched by nature, with a sense of continuity, relationality, gentleness, and care. Recommended.'"—M. G. Spencer, CHOICE "Sensitive Witnesses excels in bringing to light the ways that these five women sought to understand the world around them and disseminate their findings.... Girten [uses] their work to reveal that early modern natural philosophy was more heterogenous than traditional readings, viewed through the lens of Bacon and the Royal Society, suggest."—Peter West, ABO: Interactive Journal for Women in the Arts, 1640–1830 "Kristen Girten's Sensitive Witnesses crafts an exhilarating and revisionary argument for Enlightenment women's material attunement to nature."—Helen Thompson, Eighteenth-Century Studies