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Answered by SrijeetShikalgar
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Bacon's aphoristic style of writing serves a precise purpose. He wants to purge the English language of superfluous words, just as he wants to purge the modern mind of superfluous ideas. For Bacon, as for many of his contemporaries, language is a reflection of thought. So clear thoughts should always be articulated by language with the greatest possible degree of clarity and precision.

The aphorisms that Bacon employs are remarkable for their forcefulness. The nineteenth-century English churchman Dean Church described Bacon's aphoristic sentences as coming down like the strokes of a hammer. And this is a deliberate strategy on Bacon's part. By seeking the maximum degree of both concision and precision, he's trying to get the reader to accept the force of his arguments. Short sentences are often more effective in this regard, giving the arguments they contain more immediacy, a greater sense of power.

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