In The Areopagitica, his most important work of prose, John Milton mentions Galileo as the illustrious martyr who fought for the freedom of thought. The name of the great scientist is repeated several times in the English poet’s epic masterpiece: Paradise Lost. In three different passages of the poem, Milton in fact celebrates the “Tuscan Artist” and his crucial achievements in astronomy. Nevertheless, in a subsequent passage, the poet addresses the Copernican issue without openly defending the heliocentric theory confirmed by Galileo’s discoveries. In fact, he neither embraces the Copernican system nor the Ptolemaic one, but instead compares them, following a dialectic method where one cannot fail to notice an echo of Galileo’s Dialogue Co...
Presents a class of Professor John Rogers that studies the John Milton's work. In this class Paradis...
The Italian verse of Milton consists of but six poems: five sonnets and the single stanza of a canzo...
In this work the author argues that John Milton justifies the intelligibility and priority of Christ...
The effect of the so-called "Scientific Revolution", especially that of the "New Astronomy", is very...
The idea of Nature as a book written by God is the most meaningful Galilean allusion in Milton’s sac...
Our Universe is ever expanding and seemingly infinite. While this knowledge is taken for granted in ...
Our Universe is ever expanding and seemingly infinite. And while these concepts are things that we i...
“Almost in the same historical moment when Galileo directed all modern physics to the reading of tha...
When Milton wrote Paradise Lost it was still a matter of dispute whether Copernicus and Galileo were...
textIn the grand invocation at the beginning of Book VII of his epic Paradise Lost, John Milton sele...
This article reveals that John Milton employed an allusion to the aurora borealis in book 6 (79–83) ...
dissertationMilton represents the cosmos of Paradise Lost as an analog to the world views of his tim...
John Milton is a hero to Millennials: C. S. Lewis based Perelandra on Paradise Lost; Philip Pullman’...
In many respects, Milton is the epitome of the committed writer for whom the pen is the weapon he wi...
PURPOSE: To show how John Milton (1608-1674) incorporates contemporary scientific theories and disco...
Presents a class of Professor John Rogers that studies the John Milton's work. In this class Paradis...
The Italian verse of Milton consists of but six poems: five sonnets and the single stanza of a canzo...
In this work the author argues that John Milton justifies the intelligibility and priority of Christ...
The effect of the so-called "Scientific Revolution", especially that of the "New Astronomy", is very...
The idea of Nature as a book written by God is the most meaningful Galilean allusion in Milton’s sac...
Our Universe is ever expanding and seemingly infinite. While this knowledge is taken for granted in ...
Our Universe is ever expanding and seemingly infinite. And while these concepts are things that we i...
“Almost in the same historical moment when Galileo directed all modern physics to the reading of tha...
When Milton wrote Paradise Lost it was still a matter of dispute whether Copernicus and Galileo were...
textIn the grand invocation at the beginning of Book VII of his epic Paradise Lost, John Milton sele...
This article reveals that John Milton employed an allusion to the aurora borealis in book 6 (79–83) ...
dissertationMilton represents the cosmos of Paradise Lost as an analog to the world views of his tim...
John Milton is a hero to Millennials: C. S. Lewis based Perelandra on Paradise Lost; Philip Pullman’...
In many respects, Milton is the epitome of the committed writer for whom the pen is the weapon he wi...
PURPOSE: To show how John Milton (1608-1674) incorporates contemporary scientific theories and disco...
Presents a class of Professor John Rogers that studies the John Milton's work. In this class Paradis...
The Italian verse of Milton consists of but six poems: five sonnets and the single stanza of a canzo...
In this work the author argues that John Milton justifies the intelligibility and priority of Christ...