This monograph investigates the development of hydrostatics as a science. In the process, it sheds new light on the nature of science and its origins in the Scientific Revolution. Readers will come to see that the history of hydrostatics reveals subtle ways in which the science of the seventeenth century differed from previous periods. The key, the author argues, is the new insights into the concept of pressure that emerged during the Scientific Revolution. This came about due to contributions from such figures as Simon Stevin, Pascal, Boyle and Newton. The author compares their work with Galileo and Descartes, neither of whom grasped the need for a new conception of pressure. As a result, their contributions to hydrostatics were unproducti...
Sir Isaac Newton's Principia Mathematica (Mathematical Principles) (1687) is considered to be among ...
In the Scholium to Book 1 of Principia, Isaac Newton describes an experiment in which a bucket of wa...
Despite the difficulty of precisely describing the nature of science, there is a widespread agreemen...
Fluid Mechanics, as a scientific discipline in a modern sense, was established between the last thir...
SUMMARY. — This article describes various endeavours to find mathematical equations for the notion o...
Abstract. Books I and III of Newton’s Principia develop Newton’s dynamical theory and show how it ex...
This dissertation presents a philosophical and developmental account of the mathematical conceptuali...
Thomas Young published in 1808 his famous paper (1) in which he derived the pressure wave speed in a...
The Oxford Handbook of the History of Physics brings together cutting-edge writing by more than twen...
Although the christening of the discipline is a relatively recent undertaking, fluid mechanics goes ...
Thomas Young published in 1808 his famous paper (1) in which he derived the pressure wave speed in a...
As evidenced by many scholars, hydraulics was one of the main interests of Leonardo da Vinci; his ma...
Related to the history of medical ideas in the 16th and 17th centuries, the present paper aims at ap...
In the eighteenth century, three camps of scientific thought appeared within the French scientific c...
Isaac Newton is widely held in the popular imagination to be one of the inventors of modern science....
Sir Isaac Newton's Principia Mathematica (Mathematical Principles) (1687) is considered to be among ...
In the Scholium to Book 1 of Principia, Isaac Newton describes an experiment in which a bucket of wa...
Despite the difficulty of precisely describing the nature of science, there is a widespread agreemen...
Fluid Mechanics, as a scientific discipline in a modern sense, was established between the last thir...
SUMMARY. — This article describes various endeavours to find mathematical equations for the notion o...
Abstract. Books I and III of Newton’s Principia develop Newton’s dynamical theory and show how it ex...
This dissertation presents a philosophical and developmental account of the mathematical conceptuali...
Thomas Young published in 1808 his famous paper (1) in which he derived the pressure wave speed in a...
The Oxford Handbook of the History of Physics brings together cutting-edge writing by more than twen...
Although the christening of the discipline is a relatively recent undertaking, fluid mechanics goes ...
Thomas Young published in 1808 his famous paper (1) in which he derived the pressure wave speed in a...
As evidenced by many scholars, hydraulics was one of the main interests of Leonardo da Vinci; his ma...
Related to the history of medical ideas in the 16th and 17th centuries, the present paper aims at ap...
In the eighteenth century, three camps of scientific thought appeared within the French scientific c...
Isaac Newton is widely held in the popular imagination to be one of the inventors of modern science....
Sir Isaac Newton's Principia Mathematica (Mathematical Principles) (1687) is considered to be among ...
In the Scholium to Book 1 of Principia, Isaac Newton describes an experiment in which a bucket of wa...
Despite the difficulty of precisely describing the nature of science, there is a widespread agreemen...