Toward a Scientific World View History 104 / February 1, 2013.

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Toward a Scientific World View History 104 / February 1, 2013

Transcript of Toward a Scientific World View History 104 / February 1, 2013.

Page 1: Toward a Scientific World View History 104 / February 1, 2013.

Toward a Scientific World ViewHistory 104 / February 1, 2013

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Tycho Brahe(1546-1601)

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Brahe’s compound near Copenhagen

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Brahe’s system of observation

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Brahe’s effort to explain planetary motion

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Vesalius(1514-1564)

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Title page of the Vesalius anatomy “atlas”

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Drawings by Vesalius: human muscles; the arteries

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Francis Bacon (1561-1626)

The Advancement of Learning

(1605)

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Bacon urges English scientists to seek new shores (1620)

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Masters of medicine I:

Paracelsus(1493-1541)

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Masters of medicine II:

William Harvey(1578-1657)

On the Circulationof Blood (1628)

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Giants ofastronomy I:

Nicolai Copernicus (1473-1543)

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Copernicus,On the Revolutions of the

Heavenly spheres(1543)

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The Copernican model

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Giants ofastronomy II:

Johannes Kepler(1571-1630)

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Kepler’s Second Law of Planetary Motion

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Giants of astronomy III:

Galileo(1564-1642)

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The Starry Messenger(1610)

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Dialogue on the Two Chief World Systems (1632)

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Galileo faces the Inquisition (1633)

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The mechanical universe I:

Isaac Newton(1642-1727)

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The mechanical universe II:

René Descartes(1596-1650)

Discourse on Method (1637)

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Gresham College, first site of the Royal Society of London

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Prominent early members of the Royal Society

- Robert Boyle- William Harvey- Roger Hook- Anton van Leeuwenhoek- Isaac Newton- Christopher Wren