Subject: Jesuits--History--17th century--Contributions in science

The new science and Jesuit science : seventeenth century perspectives
AuthorFeingold, Mordechai
PlaceDordrecht
PublisherSpringer Netherlands
CollectionRicci Institute Library
Edition1st ed.
LanguageEnglish
TypeDigital Book (PDF)
SeriesArchimedes (Dordrecht, Netherlands) ; volume 6
ShelfDigital Archives
Call NumberBL245.N48 2003
Descriptionpdf. [ix, 270 p. :ill.]
Note

The New Science and Jesuit Science : Seventeenth Century Perspectives / edited by M. Feingold.

Includes bibliographical references.

Preface /  Mordechai Feingold --  Mathematics and Modesty in the Society of Jesus: The Problems of Christoph Grienberger /  Michel John Gorman --  The Grounds for Conflict: Grienberger, Grassi, Galileo, and Posterity /  Mordechai Feingold --  Additio illa non videtur edenda: Giuseppe Biancani, Reader of Galileo in an Unedited Censored Text /  Francesco Paolo De Ceglia --  Two Jesuit Responses to Galileo's Science of Motion: Honore Fabri and Pierre Le Cazre /  Carla Rita Palmerino --  Jesuit Mathematical Practice in Portugal, 1540-1759 /  Henrique Leitao --  The Celestial Pilgrimages of Valentin Stansel (1621-1705), Jesuit Astronomer and Missionary in Brazil /  Carlos Ziller Camenietzki.

"One cannot talk about mathematics in the 16th and 17th centuries without seeing a Jesuit at every corner," George Sarton observed in 1940. * Sarton, of course, was not the first to recognize the disproportionate representation of members of the Society of Jesus in the scientific enterprise of the early modern period. However, unlike many historians who belittled the discernible numerical strength of the Jesuits on the grounds that they lacked originality and were generally hostile to new ideas, Sarton correlated numerical strength with significance. Hence his plea for collecting the papers of that industrious historian of Jesuit science, Henri Bosmans, was quite refreshing. Yet Sarton's appeal went unheeded, and not only with respect to Bosmans' papers. The perception of the Jesuits as plodding pedagogues and obscurantists remained as ingrained as ever, virtually sanctioning the disregard of their activities. Such neglect meant that the exact nature of the Jesuit contribution to the Scientific Revolution remained sketchy at best; only recently - owing to a long-overdue examination of the Order's archives and of published texts - have new contours begun to emerge. Striking in this reassessment is a more nuanced appreciation of the Jesuits' interaction with "modernity" and a far greater recognition of the Jesuit contribution to the two poles of modern science: the mathematization of natural philosophy and experimental science."

DOI 10.1007/978-94-017-0361-1

Local access dig.pdf. [Feingold-New Science and Jesuit Science.pdf]

Multimedia
ISBN9401703612 ; 9789401703611