This article reconstructs the historical and scientific framework within which modern science, and meteorology in particular, were born and developed beginning in the late XVI century. Scientific knowledge during this period was based on Aristotle’s books and the Holy Bible, and this constituted a serious obstacle for the new astronomical discoveries that contradicted this framework. The paper starts with the earliest experiments made by Galileo, his discoveries, e.g. thermoscope, telescope, solar spots and motion that caused his trial. Galileo facilitated the transition from the middle age to modern science, fighting against the old ideas and separating faith from research. The new science had a strong development with Ferdinand II, grand ...
Between 1608 and 1610 the canopy of the night sky changed forever, ripped open by an object created ...
This volume contains the proceedings of an international conference held in Florence at the Museo Ga...
Galileo Galilei was born in 1564 - the same year that Shakespeare was born and Michelangelo died. Fr...
At the beginning of the seventeenth century, Galileo Galilei made certain astronomical discoveries w...
The main characteristic of modern science is that its new theories contain the old ones as their par...
This article presents the contributions of Galileo to modern science, especially that of definitivel...
Meteorological phenomena have intrigued scientists for millennia, a fascination not likely to abate ...
When studying the controversy prevailing between Galileo and the Jesuits over the comets of 1618, hi...
Presented as a study of ‘Galileo’s debts to the scholarly traditions he inherited, both from his con...
Of all the early proponents of the Copernican theory, Galileo was perhaps the most renowned and cert...
For Renaissance Aristotelian natural philosophers, ideally knowledge was certain and based on syllog...
Topic of the article is relation of the rise of modern science and religion in Western Europe in XVI...
he life and work of the early 17th-century mathematician and astronomer Galileo Galilei have been pr...
Asim Gangopadhyaya writes about Galileo\u27s contributions to mechanics and physics in this chapter ...
The early modern period saw the rapid development of two fundamental bodies of knowledge, astronomy ...
Between 1608 and 1610 the canopy of the night sky changed forever, ripped open by an object created ...
This volume contains the proceedings of an international conference held in Florence at the Museo Ga...
Galileo Galilei was born in 1564 - the same year that Shakespeare was born and Michelangelo died. Fr...
At the beginning of the seventeenth century, Galileo Galilei made certain astronomical discoveries w...
The main characteristic of modern science is that its new theories contain the old ones as their par...
This article presents the contributions of Galileo to modern science, especially that of definitivel...
Meteorological phenomena have intrigued scientists for millennia, a fascination not likely to abate ...
When studying the controversy prevailing between Galileo and the Jesuits over the comets of 1618, hi...
Presented as a study of ‘Galileo’s debts to the scholarly traditions he inherited, both from his con...
Of all the early proponents of the Copernican theory, Galileo was perhaps the most renowned and cert...
For Renaissance Aristotelian natural philosophers, ideally knowledge was certain and based on syllog...
Topic of the article is relation of the rise of modern science and religion in Western Europe in XVI...
he life and work of the early 17th-century mathematician and astronomer Galileo Galilei have been pr...
Asim Gangopadhyaya writes about Galileo\u27s contributions to mechanics and physics in this chapter ...
The early modern period saw the rapid development of two fundamental bodies of knowledge, astronomy ...
Between 1608 and 1610 the canopy of the night sky changed forever, ripped open by an object created ...
This volume contains the proceedings of an international conference held in Florence at the Museo Ga...
Galileo Galilei was born in 1564 - the same year that Shakespeare was born and Michelangelo died. Fr...