Books and the Sciences in History

Books and the Sciences in History

Author: Marina Frasca-Spada

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2000-11-02

Total Pages: 460

ISBN-13: 9780521659390

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This book, published in 2000, examines the intersection between science and books from early medieval times to the nineteenth century.


Maria Sibylla Merian

Maria Sibylla Merian

Author: Daniel Kiecol

Publisher: Koenemann

Published: 2019-07

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9783741916045

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Scientist, artist, and explorer: Maria Sibylla Merian (1647-1717) continues to fascinate with her highly detailed depictions of flowers, butterflies, and other insects, all done with vibrant colors. This volume includes many of Merian's most beautiful drawings and prints.


Histoires de la Terre

Histoires de la Terre

Author:

Publisher: BRILL

Published: 2008-01-01

Total Pages: 272

ISBN-13: 9401206414

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This collection of essays explores how Enlightenment and post-Enlightenment developments in the earth sciences and related fields (paleontology, mining, archeology, seismology, oceanography, evolution, etc.) impacted on contemporary French culture. They reveal that geological ideas were a much more pervasive and influential cultural force than has hitherto been supposed. From the mid-eighteenth century, with the publication of Buffon’s seminal Théorie de la Terre (1749), until the early twentieth century, concepts and figures drawn from the earth sciences inspired some of the most important French philosophers, novelists, political theorists, historians and popularizers of science of the time. This book charts the original and influential ways in which French writers and thinkers, such as Buffon, d’Holbach, Balzac, Sand, Verne, Gide and Malraux, exploited the earth sciences for very different ends. This volume will be of interest to students, researchers and scholars of French literature in the modern period, cultural historians of modern France, scholars of European studies, of French political history, of the History of Ideas or the History of Science as well as researchers in landscape and physical geography.


History of Science, History of Text

History of Science, History of Text

Author: Karine Chemla

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2004

Total Pages: 308

ISBN-13: 9781402023200

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This book explores the hypothesis that the types of inscription or text used by a given community of practitioners are designed in the very same process as the one producing concepts and results. The book sets out to show how, in exactly the same way as for the other outcomes of scientific activity, all kinds of factors, cognitive as well as cultural, technological, social or institutional, conjoin in shaping the various types of writings and texts used by the practitioners of the sciences. To make this point, the book opts for a genuinely multicultural approach to the texts produced in the context of practices of knowledge. It is predicated on the conviction that, in order to approach any topic in the history of science from a theoretical point of view, it may be fruitful to consider it from a global perspective. The book hence does not only gather papers dealing with geometrical papyri of antiquity, sixteenth century French books in algebra, seventeenth century scientific manuscripts and paintings, eighteenth and nineteenth century memoirs published by European academies or scientific journals, and Western Opera Omnia. It also considers the problems of interpretation relating to reading Babylonian clay tablets, Sanskrit oral scriptures and Chinese books and illustrations. Thus it enables the reader to explore the diversity of forms which texts have taken in history and the wide range of uses they have inspired. This volume will be of interest to historians, philosophers of science, linguists and anthropologists