The modern understanding of the notorious 1633 trial of Galileo is that of Science and Reason persecuted by Ignorance and Superstition-of Galileo as a lonely, courageous freethinker oppressed by a reactionary and anti-intellectual institution fearful of losing its power and influence. But is this an accurate picture? In his provocative reexamination of one of the turning points in the history of science and thought, Wade Rowland contends that the dispute concerned an infinitely more profound question: What is truth and how can we know it? Rowland demonstrates that Galileo's mista
It has been presupposed that the origin of the controversy between science and religion began with C...
The 17th-century controversy between Galileo and the Vatican is examined. Fifteen theses are advance...
The legend of Galileo’s encounter with the Inquisition is one of the constitutive myths of modernity...
The traditional stereotype of historical conflict between scientific knowledge and religious belief ...
For more than 30 years, historians have rejected what they call the ‘warfare thesis’ – the idea that...
Far from egalitarian, Galileo’s epistemology asserts an uncompromising hierarchy between science and...
2 “I urge theologians, scientists, and historians, motivated by a spirit of sincere collaboration, t...
Galileo Galilei was born in 1564 - the same year that Shakespeare was born and Michelangelo died. Fr...
In a startling reinterpretation of the evidence, Stillman Drake advances the hypothesis that Galileo...
Maurice Finocchiaro considers the trial of Galileo by the Roman Inquisition in 1633, weighing up the...
This paper analyses the conflict between science and religion related to the Galileo affair. By stud...
he life and work of the early 17th-century mathematician and astronomer Galileo Galilei have been pr...
In a speech celebrating the centenary of Einstein’s birth Pope John Paul II admitted that Galileo ha...
Was Galileo’s clash with the Church about science or about legal procedures that he had apparently n...
Ghins Michel. Mariano Artigas, William R. Shea, Galileo in Rome. The Rise and Fall of a Troublesome ...
It has been presupposed that the origin of the controversy between science and religion began with C...
The 17th-century controversy between Galileo and the Vatican is examined. Fifteen theses are advance...
The legend of Galileo’s encounter with the Inquisition is one of the constitutive myths of modernity...
The traditional stereotype of historical conflict between scientific knowledge and religious belief ...
For more than 30 years, historians have rejected what they call the ‘warfare thesis’ – the idea that...
Far from egalitarian, Galileo’s epistemology asserts an uncompromising hierarchy between science and...
2 “I urge theologians, scientists, and historians, motivated by a spirit of sincere collaboration, t...
Galileo Galilei was born in 1564 - the same year that Shakespeare was born and Michelangelo died. Fr...
In a startling reinterpretation of the evidence, Stillman Drake advances the hypothesis that Galileo...
Maurice Finocchiaro considers the trial of Galileo by the Roman Inquisition in 1633, weighing up the...
This paper analyses the conflict between science and religion related to the Galileo affair. By stud...
he life and work of the early 17th-century mathematician and astronomer Galileo Galilei have been pr...
In a speech celebrating the centenary of Einstein’s birth Pope John Paul II admitted that Galileo ha...
Was Galileo’s clash with the Church about science or about legal procedures that he had apparently n...
Ghins Michel. Mariano Artigas, William R. Shea, Galileo in Rome. The Rise and Fall of a Troublesome ...
It has been presupposed that the origin of the controversy between science and religion began with C...
The 17th-century controversy between Galileo and the Vatican is examined. Fifteen theses are advance...
The legend of Galileo’s encounter with the Inquisition is one of the constitutive myths of modernity...