The birth of modern science
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The birth of modern science
(The making of Europe)
Blackwell Publishers, 2001
- : hbk. : alk. paper
- : pbk
- Other Title
-
La nascita della scienza moderna in Europa
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [235]-250) and index
Description and Table of Contents
- Volume
-
: hbk. : alk. paper ISBN 9780631205623
Description
This history of the birth of modern science is ideal for those engaging with the subject for the first time. It shatters the illusion that science is 'dry' and divorced from culture by exploring the powerful clashes between traditions and value systems that gave rise to it. The author shows how many of the characteristics that distinguish science today emerged in the midst of the wars and plagues of the seventeenth century and defines what was new about this form of knowledge.Rossi's account covers topics such as the new astronomy, discoveries made with microscopes, the principle of inertia, experiments on voids, and the circulatory system. Alongside these, each chapter also addresses the great ideas that were central to this intellectual revolution: the new appraisal of technology, a new view of God as an engineer or clock maker, the introduction of the dimension of time into the study of nature, and so on. This passionate book will enable readers to engage with the complex relationship of science and philosophy.
Table of Contents
Preface by Jacques Le Goff. Introduction. 1. Obstacles. 2. Secrets. 3. Engineers. 4. The Unseen World. 5. A New Universe. 6. Galileo. 7. Descartes. 8. Countless Other Worlds. 9. Mechanical Philosophy. 10. Chemical Philosophy. 11. Magnetic Philosophy. 12. The Heart and Generation. 13. Time and Nature. 14. Classification. 15. Instruments and Theories. 16. Academies. 17. Newton. Chronology. Bibliography. Index.
- Volume
-
: pbk ISBN 9780631227113
Description
This history of the birth of modern science shatters the illusion that science is 'dry' and divorced from culture by exploring the powerful clashes between traditions and value systems that gave rise to it. The author shows how many of the characteristics that distinguish science today emerged in the midst of the wars and plagues of the seventeenth century and defines what was new about this form of knowledge.
Table of Contents
Series Editor's Preface by Jacques Le Goff. Introduction.
1. Obstacles.
2. Secrets.
3. Engineers.
4. The Unseen World.
5. A New Universe.
6. Galileo.
7. Descartes.
8. Countless Other Worlds.
9. Mechanical Philosophy.
10. Chemical Philosophy.
11. Magnetic Philosophy.
12. The Heart and Generation.
13. Time and Nature.
14. Classification.
15. Instruments and Theories.
16. Academies.
17. Newton.
Chronology.
Bibliography.
Index.
by "Nielsen BookData"