Science and the Shaping of Modernity 1210-1685
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Köp båda 2 för 668 krWolfgang Lefvre ISIS d Gaukroger's book is a historical reconstruction that brackets historical context (social, practical, political etc.) and offers a plethora of studies on intellectual history on a variety of subjects that deserve attention in any investigation of the emergence of the scientific culture of the West.
John Hedley Brooke British Journal for the History of Science The thesis of his substanial and impreesive book is that Christianity indeed played a major, not, as often proposed, through the dissociation of science from religious concerns, but through a reconstituted partnership between Christianity and (a reconstructed) natural philosophy...I am not aware of any other treatment of these themes that combines so magisterially a discerning account of changing boundaries between disciplines with a dispassionate analysis of the changing relations between theology and the sciences. The result is a scholarly exploration on a grand scale.
Wolfgang Lefvre ISIS Gaukroger's book is a historical context (social, practical, political, etc.) and offers a plethora of studies in intellectual history on a variety of subjects that deserve attention in any investigation of the emergence of the scientidic culture of the West.
Michael H. Shank, Renaissance Quarterly This impressive and wide-ranging book is the first of a quintet devoted to the question: how in the (Western) world did all cognitive values come to be associated with scientific ones?... Gaukroger's grand beginning of an even grander five-volume narrative is an exceptional book. Its structure of scientific authority, as it were, is certain to stimulate long and lively discussions among academics of every stripe.
John Hedley Brooke, British Journal for the History of Science [A] substantial and impressive book...I am not aware of any other treatment of these themes that combines so magisterially a discerning account of changing boundaries between disciplines with a dispassionate analysis of the changing relations between theology and the sciences. The result is a scholarly exploration on the grand scale.
<br>Stephen Gaukroger has a BA (Philosophy) from the University of London and a Ph.D (History and Philosophy of Science) from the University of Cambridge. He was Research Fellow in the Philosophy of Science, Clare Hall, Cambridge, 1977-1978; Research Fellow, Department of History and Philosophy of Science, University of Melbourne, 1978-1980. Since 1981 he has been in the Philosophy Department at the University of Sydney where he is currently Professor of History of Philosophy and History of Science.<br>
Introduction; PART I; 1. Science and modernity; PART II; 2. From Augustinian synthesis to Aristotelian amalgam; 3. Renaissance natural philosophies; 4. The interpretation of nature and the origins of physico-theology; PART III; 5. Reconstructing natural philosophy; 6. Reconstructing the natural philosopher; 7. The aims of enquiry; PART IV; 8. Corpuscularianism and the rise of mechanism; 9. The scope of mechanism; 10. Experimental natural philosophy; 11. The quantitative transformation of natural philosophy; PART V; 12. The unity of knowledge