Was the Society of Jesus the main obstacle for the acceptance of the new physics in modern Europe? Was their educational system, all over Europe, completely under the strict control of regulations imposed by the Jesuit hierarchy in Rome? How did the various Jesuit colleges confront, reject, or absorb the crucial novelties of the mathematical and experimental method? Marcus Hellyer addresses such crucial questions in this book
Blaise Pascal, then a young man, and father Etienne Noel, a Jesuit, held very different views on the...
The twelve decades of modern academic history of physics have provided enough material for the stud...
Medieval theologians reconciled Aristotelian natural philosophy with Christian dogma in a synthesis ...
Was the Society of Jesus the main obstacle for the acceptance of the new physics in modern Europe? W...
Working from within the Lakatosian framework of scientific change, this paper seeks to gain a deeper...
Michael John Gorman, Jesuit explorations of the Torricellian space : carpbladders and sulphurous fum...
Despite voluminous research concerning French society during the eighteenth century the scientific p...
International audienceIn the 18th century, colleges or boarding schools are kept by the Jesuits, the...
Since their foundation in 1540, and well after their first suppression by pope Clement XIV in 1773, ...
Straipsnyje analizuojama jėzuitų mokslinė veikla XVII–XVIII a. mokslo revoliucijos kontekste. Pateik...
From 1814, linked to their educational work, Jesuits made significant contributions to the natural s...
In the past forty years, science has been gradually relegated to technology and utilitarian knowledg...
By the end of the sixteenth century, many Jesuit colleges had become centers of excellence all over ...
One of the most fruitful developments in Enlightenment historiography in recent years has been an in...
Caspar Ságner (1721-1781), born in Neumarkt, Silesia (now Środa Śląska, Poland), was a teacher of ma...
Blaise Pascal, then a young man, and father Etienne Noel, a Jesuit, held very different views on the...
The twelve decades of modern academic history of physics have provided enough material for the stud...
Medieval theologians reconciled Aristotelian natural philosophy with Christian dogma in a synthesis ...
Was the Society of Jesus the main obstacle for the acceptance of the new physics in modern Europe? W...
Working from within the Lakatosian framework of scientific change, this paper seeks to gain a deeper...
Michael John Gorman, Jesuit explorations of the Torricellian space : carpbladders and sulphurous fum...
Despite voluminous research concerning French society during the eighteenth century the scientific p...
International audienceIn the 18th century, colleges or boarding schools are kept by the Jesuits, the...
Since their foundation in 1540, and well after their first suppression by pope Clement XIV in 1773, ...
Straipsnyje analizuojama jėzuitų mokslinė veikla XVII–XVIII a. mokslo revoliucijos kontekste. Pateik...
From 1814, linked to their educational work, Jesuits made significant contributions to the natural s...
In the past forty years, science has been gradually relegated to technology and utilitarian knowledg...
By the end of the sixteenth century, many Jesuit colleges had become centers of excellence all over ...
One of the most fruitful developments in Enlightenment historiography in recent years has been an in...
Caspar Ságner (1721-1781), born in Neumarkt, Silesia (now Środa Śląska, Poland), was a teacher of ma...
Blaise Pascal, then a young man, and father Etienne Noel, a Jesuit, held very different views on the...
The twelve decades of modern academic history of physics have provided enough material for the stud...
Medieval theologians reconciled Aristotelian natural philosophy with Christian dogma in a synthesis ...