Galileo and the scientific revolution [by] Laura Fermi and Gilberto Bernardini.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Science & discoveryPublisher: New York, Basic Books [1961]Edition: [1st ed.]Description: 150 pages illustrations 22 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
Subject(s): Genre/Form:
Contents:
1. Student in Pisa. -- 2. The young teacher. -- 3. Good times. -- 4. The telescope. -- 5. The universe through the telescope. -- 6. Florence and Rome. -- 7. Galileo and Urban VIII. -- 8. Father and daughter. -- 9. The last years. -- 10. Galileo's physics.
Subject: An absorbing account of the origins of modern science as well as a biography of the revolutionary thinker, this inspiring book was co-written by a former director of the Italian Institute for Nuclear Physics and a historian of science (who was also the wife of physicist Enrico Fermi). It begins in Galileo's youth, with his return to his native city of Pisa to train as a physician. Instead, the student became captivated by the power of mathematical reasoning -- an interest that led him to apply mathematical logic to natural events and, ultimately, to invent the concept of experimentation. Galileo's progress from student to teacher to scientific innovator is traced, with particular emphasis on his experiments with building and refining telescopes and his unprecedented observations of the moon and planets. The dramatic results of his findings, including his refutation of Aristotelian theory and his support of Copernican doctrine, are related in full, along with his clash with the papal inquisition and his tragic demise under house arrest. Written with a warm appreciation for the wonders of Galileo's achievements and with impeccable scholarship, this book concludes with a survey of the scientist's remarkable legacy. Amazon.com.
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Books Books Jost Bürgi Library Reading Room QB36.G2 F43 1961 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 31560000036893

Includes bibliographical references.

1. Student in Pisa. -- 2. The young teacher. -- 3. Good times. -- 4. The telescope. -- 5. The universe through the telescope. -- 6. Florence and Rome. -- 7. Galileo and Urban VIII. -- 8. Father and daughter. -- 9. The last years. -- 10. Galileo's physics.

An absorbing account of the origins of modern science as well as a biography of the revolutionary thinker, this inspiring book was co-written by a former director of the Italian Institute for Nuclear Physics and a historian of science (who was also the wife of physicist Enrico Fermi). It begins in Galileo's youth, with his return to his native city of Pisa to train as a physician. Instead, the student became captivated by the power of mathematical reasoning -- an interest that led him to apply mathematical logic to natural events and, ultimately, to invent the concept of experimentation. Galileo's progress from student to teacher to scientific innovator is traced, with particular emphasis on his experiments with building and refining telescopes and his unprecedented observations of the moon and planets. The dramatic results of his findings, including his refutation of Aristotelian theory and his support of Copernican doctrine, are related in full, along with his clash with the papal inquisition and his tragic demise under house arrest. Written with a warm appreciation for the wonders of Galileo's achievements and with impeccable scholarship, this book concludes with a survey of the scientist's remarkable legacy. Amazon.com.

31560000036893 6619

A study on the role of Galileo inshaping the scientific method, index

There are no comments on this title.

to post a comment.