The Reception Of The Galilean Science Of Motion In Seventeenth Century Europe


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The Reception of the Galilean Science of Motion in Seventeenth-Century Europe


The Reception of the Galilean Science of Motion in Seventeenth-Century Europe

Author: Carla Rita Palmerino

language: en

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Release Date: 2013-03-20


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This book collects contributions by some of the leading scholars working on seventeenth-century mechanics and the mechanical philosophy. Together, the articles provide a broad and accurate picture of the fortune of Galileo's theory of motion in Europe and of the various physical, mathematical, and ontological arguments that were used in favour and against it. Were Galileo's contemporaries really aware of what Westfall has described as "the incompatibility between the demands of mathematical mechanics and the needs of mechanical philosophy"? To what extent did Galileo's silence concerning the cause of free fall impede the acceptance of his theory of motion? Which methods were used, before the invention of the infinitesimal calculus, to check the validity of Galileo's laws of free fall and of parabolic motion? And what sort of experiments were invoked in favour or against these laws? These and related questions are addressed in this volume.

The Reception of the Galilean Science of Motion in Seventeenth-Century Europe


The Reception of the Galilean Science of Motion in Seventeenth-Century Europe

Author: Carla Rita Palmerino

language: en

Publisher: Springer

Release Date: 2014-03-14


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The Science of Nature in the Seventeenth Century


The Science of Nature in the Seventeenth Century

Author: Peter R. Anstey

language: en

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Release Date: 2006-06-28


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One of the hallmarks of the modern world has been the stunning rise of the natural sciences. The exponential expansion of scientific knowledge and the accompanying technology that so impact on our daily lives are truly remarkable. But what is often taken for granted is the enviable epistemic-credit rating of scientific knowledge: science is authoritative, science inspires confidence, science is right. Yet it has not always been so. In the seventeenth century the situation was markedly different: competing sources of authority, shifting disciplinary boundaries, emerging modes of experimental practice and methodological reflection were some of the constituents in a quite different mélange in which knowledge of nature was by no means p- eminent. It was the desire to probe the underlying causes of the shift from the early modern ‘nature-knowledge’ to modern science that was one of the stimuli for the ‘Origins of Modernity: Early Modern Thought 1543–1789’ conference held in Sydney in July 2002. How and why did modern science emerge from its early modern roots to the dominant position which it enjoys in today’s post-modern world? Under the auspices of the International Society for Intellectual History, The University of New South Wales and The University of Sydney, a group of historians and philosophers of science gathered to discuss this issue. However, it soon became clear that a prior question needed to be settled first: the question as to the precise nature of the quest for knowledge of the natural realm in the seventeenth century.