Book Search:  

 

 
Google full text of our books:

bookjacket

Revolutionizing the Sciences:
European Knowledge and Its Ambitions, 1500-1700
Peter Dear

Winner of Watson Davis And Helen Miles Davis Prize.

Paper | 2001 | $24.95
365 pp. | 6 x 9 | 30 line illus.

Shopping Cart | Reviews | Table of Contents

Recommendations for Course Adoption

LEARN MORE ABOUT PRINCETON'S SPECIAL SALE


Paper $21.00
16% off regular price

For customers in the
U.S. and Canada only

From Copernicus, who put the earth in orbit around the sun, to Isaac Newton, who gave the world universal gravitation, the Scientific Revolution of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries transformed the way that Europeans understood their world. In this book, Peter Dear offers an accessible introduction to the origins of modern science for both students and general readers.

Beginning with "what was worth knowing in 1500," Dear takes the reader through natural philosophy, humanism, mathematics, and experimentalism until he can describe "what was worth knowing by the eighteenth century." Along the way, he discusses the key ideas, individuals, and social changes that constituted the Scientific Revolution.

For all of its economy and broad appeal, Revolutionizing the Sciences never sacrifices sophistication of treatment. Dear questions triumphal ideas of scientific progress, unravels the connections between scientific knowledge and power over nature, and distinguishes between the scientific renaissance that characterized the sixteenth century and the more fundamental revolution that occurred in the seventeenth.

This is an ideal textbook on the Scientific Revolution for courses on the history of science or the history of early modern Europe. The text is chronologically arranged and fully covers both the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, standing alone as an up-to-date, complete general introduction to the origins of modern science in Europe.

Revolutionizing the Sciences is the best available choice for teaching or learning about the developments that came to be called the Scientific Revolution.

Review:

[Dear] throws interesting light on the changing criteria used to evaluate natural knowledge, especially the increasing emphasis on experiment. . . . As a full and accurate account of such matters, this book is the best available, and I would recommend it to anyone."--Michael Hunter, Nature

Endorsements:

"It is a pleasure to have someone with Peter Dear's knowledge and ability take on the problem of the textbook. Dear includes both the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries in his survey and gives the reader a clear and informative account of some of the basic philosophical issues in natural philosophy. His chapters are economically written and well designed to cover broad and important issues. Dear's work addresses a lacuna by providing a chronologically organized introduction to the context and events of the scientific revolution."--Paula Findlen, Stanford University

"This is an entirely excellent work and it will make an important contribution to our understanding of the development of early modern science."--John Henry, University of Edinburgh

"It is lucid, well written and shows a thorough command of the subject matter. The author succeeds admirably in making complex ideas intelligible and interesting for readers and employs effective examples to illustrate the changing nature of scientific thought."--Marisa Linton, Kingston University

Table of Contents:

Preface vii
Introduction: Philosophy and Operationalism 1
1. "What was Worth Knowing" in 1500 10
2. Humanism and Ancient Wisdom: How to Learn Things in the Sixteenth Century 30
3. The Scholar and the Craftsman: Paracelsus, Gilbert, Bacon 49
4. Mathematics Challenges Philosphy: Galileo, Kepler, and the Surveyors 65
5. Mechanism: Decartes Builds a Universe 80
6. Extra-Curricular Activities: New Homes for Natural Knowledge 101
7. Experiment: How to Learn Things about Nature in the Seventeenth Century 131
8. Cartesians and Newtonians 149
Conclusion: What was Worth Knowing by the Eighteenth Century 168
Notes and References 171
Documentation and Further Reading 181
Dramatis Personae 193
Glossary of Major Terms 197
Ondex 201

Subject Areas:

Cloth: For sale only in the United States and Canada
Paper: For sale only in the United States and Canada

Shopping Cart:

Paper $21.00
16% off regular price

Special online sale for customers in the U.S. & Canada only

For customers in the U.S., Canada, Latin America, Asia, and Australia

Paper: $24.95 ISBN13: 978-0-691-08860-0

Prices subject to change without notice

File created: 9/3/2008

Questions and comments to: webmaster@press.princeton.edu
Princeton University Press

ONLINE BOOK SALE
New Book E-Mails
New In Print
Subjects
Catalogs
Series
Sample Chapters
Podcasts/Vodcasts
Recent Awards
E-Books
Online Books
Online Ordering
For Reviewers
Permissions
Class Use
About Us
Contact Us
European Office
Links
F.A.Q.
Home Page
Send me emails
about new books in:
History of Science and Medicine, Philosophy of Science
European History
More Choices
Email:
Country:
Name: