|
Vol. 1 (1996)
Christoph LÜTHY: Atomism, Lynceus, and the Fate of Seventeenth-Century
Microscopy, pp. 1-27. – André GODDU: The Logic of Copernicus’ Arguments
and His Education in Logic at Cracow, pp. 28-68. – Mario BIAGIOLI:
“Playing with the Evidence,” pp. 70-105. – Michael H. SHANK: How Shall
We Practice History? The Case of Mario Biagioli’s Galileo, Courtier. –
Ruth GLASNER: Gersonides’s Theory of Natural Motion, pp. 151-203. –
Michael HUNTER and Edward B. DAVIS: The Making of Robert Boyle’s Free
Enquiry into the Vulgarly Receiv’d Notion of Nature (1686), pp. 204-271.
– Graziella FEDERICI-VESCOVINI: Michel Scot et la “Theorica Planetarum
Gerardi,” pp. 272-282. – Steven J. HARRIS: Introduction (to the special
issue on Jesuits and the Knowledge of Nature, ed. S.J. Harris), pp.
283-286. – Steven J. HARRIS: Confession-Building, Long-Distance
Networks, and the Organization of Jesuit Science, pp. 287-318. – Marcus
HELLYER: “Because the Authority of my Superiors Commands”: Censorhip,
Physics and the German Jesuits, pp. 287-318. – Cees LEIJENHORST: Jesuit
Concepts of Spatium Imaginarium and Thomas Hobbes’s Doctrine of Space,
pp. 355-380.
Vol. 2 (1997)
Christoph LÜTHY: Thoughts and Circumstances of Sébastien Basson.
Analysis, Micro-History, Questions, pp. 1-73. – Liba TAUB: The
Rehabilitation of Wretched Subjects, pp. 74-87. – Helen KING: Beyond the
Medical Market-Place: New Directions in Ancient Medicine, pp. 88-97. –
Hans THIJSSEN: Introduction (to special issue on Medieval Cosmologies,
ed. J.M.M.H. Thijssen, pp. 107-108. – Oliver GUTMAN: On the Fringes of
the Corpus Aristotelicum: The Pseudo-Avicenna Liber Celi et Mundi, pp.
109-128. – Edwa d GRANT: Celestial Motions in the Late Middle Ages, pp.
129-148. – T.M. RUDAVSKY: Philosophical Cosmology in Judaism, pp.
149-184. – Y. Tzvi LANGERMANN: Arabic Cosmology, pp. 185-213. –
Christoph LÜTHY and William R. NEWMAN: “Matter” and “Form”: By Way of a
Preface (to the special issue on The Fate of Hylomorphism. ‘Matter’ and
‘Form’ in Early Modern Science, ed. C.H. Lüthy and W.R. Newman), pp.
215-226. – Luc DEITZ: “Falsissima est ergo haec de triplici substantia
Aristotelis doctrina.” A Sixteenth-Century Critic of Aristotle --
Francesco Patrizi da Cherso on Privation, Form and Matter, pp. 227-250.
– Stephen CLUCAS: “The Infinite Variety of Formes and Magnitude”: 16th-
and 17th-Century English Corpuscular Philosophy and Aristotelian
Theories of Matter and Form, pp. 251-271. – Emily MICHAEL: Daniel
Sennert on Matter and Form: At the Juncture of the Old and the New, pp.
272-299. – Roger ARIEW and Marjorie GRENE: The Cartesian Destiny of Form
and Matter, pp. 300-325. – Daniel GARBER: Leibniz on Form and Matter,
pp. 353-352.
Vol. 3 (1998)
William EAMON: Cannibalism and Contagion: Framing Syphilis in
Counter-Reformation Italy, pp. 1-31. – William R. NEWMAN and Lawrence M.
PRINCIPE: Alchemy vs. Chemistry: The Etymological Origins of a
Historiographic Mistake, pp. 32-65. – William C. CROSSGROVE: The
Vernacularization of Science, Medicine, and Technology in Late Medieval
Europe: Introduction (to special issue on The Vernacularization of
Science, Medicine, and Technology in Late Medieval Europe, eds. W.
Crossgrove, M. Schleissner, L. Ehrsam Voigts), pp. 81-87. – Luke
DEMAITRE: Medical Writing in Transition: Between Ars and Vulgus, pp.
88-102. – Irmtraud RÖSLER: “De Seekarte Ost vnd west to segelen...”: On
Northern European Nautical ‘Fachliteratur’ in the Late Middle Ages, pp.
103-118. – Sue Ellen HOLBROOK: A Medical Scientific Encyclopedia
‘Renewed by Goodly Printing’: Wynkyn de Worde’s English De
Proprietatibus Rerum, 119-156. – Irma TAAVITSAINEN and Päivi PAHTA:
Vernacularisation of Medical Writing in English: A Corpus-Based Study of
Scholasticism, pp. 157-185. – Mireille AUSÉCACHE: Gilles de Corbeil ou
le Médecin Pédagogue au Tournant des XII et XIIe Siècles, pp. 187-215. –
Julius ROCCA: Galen and Greek Neuroscience, pp. 216-240. – Rebecca
FLEMING and Ann Ellis HANSON: Hippocrates’ Peri Partheniôn (“Diseases of
Young Girls”): Text and Translation, pp. 241-252. – Joella G. YODER, The
Microscope in Focus, pp. 253-257. – Roger ARIEW: Leibniz on the Unicorn
and Various Other Curiosities, pp. 267-288. – Paul J.J.M. BAKKER: Les
Palestrae de Jean de Spello: Exercices scolaires d’un maître en médécine
àrouse au XIVe siècle, pp. 289-322. – Rienk VERMIJ: Subterranean Fire.
Changing Theories of the Earth during the Renaissance, pp. 323-347.
Vol. 4 (1999)
Qiong ZHANG: About God, Demons, and Miracles: the Jesuit Discourse on
the Supernatural in Late Ming China, 1-36. – Ulrich TASCHOW: Die
Bedeutung der Musik als Modell für Nicole Oresmes Theorie, pp. 37-90. –
Charlotte METHUEN: Special Providence and Sixteenth-Century Astronomical
Observation: Some Preliminary Reflections, pp. 99-113. – Silvia
Alejandra MANZO: Holy Writ, Mythology, and the Foundations of Francis
Bacon’s Principle of the Constancy of Matter, pp. 114-126. – Lluís
CIFUENTES: Vernacularization as an Intellectual and Social Bridge. The
Catalan Translations of Teodorico’s Chirurgia and of Arnau de Vilanova’s
Regimen Sanitatis, pp. 127-148. – Lawrence M. ELDREDGE: The English
Vernacular Afterlife of Benvenutus Grassus, Ophthalmologist, pp.
149-163. – Ann BLAIR: Authorship in the Popular Problemata Aristotelis,
pp. 189-227. – Ann MOYER: The Astronomers’ Game: Astrology and
University Culture in the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries, pp.
228-250. – Alexander JONES: Babylonian Nights, pp. 251-255. – Carla Rita
PALMERINO: Infinite Degrees of Speed. Marin Mersenne and the Debate over
Galileo’s Law of Free Fall, pp. 269-328. – Marek GENSLER et al.: The
Doctrine of Place in a Commentary on the Physics attributed to Antonius
Andreae, pp. 329-358.
Vol. 5 (2000)
Fascicle 1 (February 2000)
Ad Lectorem Benevolum, pp. 1-2. – Maria Teresa MONTI: Epigenesis of the
Monstrous Form and Preformistic ‘Genetics’ (Lémery – Winslow – Haller),
pp. 3-32. – Udo JECK: Virtus Lapidum. – Zur philosophischen Begründung
der magischen Wirksamkeit und der physikalischen Beschaffenheit
kostbarer Mineralien in der Naturphilosophie Alberts des Grossen, pp.
33-46. – William CROSSGROVE: The Vernacularization of Science, Medicine,
and Technolgoy in Late Medieval Europe: Broadening Our Perspectives, pp.
47-63. – Christoph LÜTHY: Caught in the Electronic Revolution.
Observations and Analyses by Some Historians of Science, Medicine,
Technology, and Philosophy, pp. 64-92. – Michael H. SHANK: Know Thyself!
[Review Article on M. Beretta, C. Pogliano, and P. Redondi, eds.,
Journals and the History of Science (Florence, 1998)], pp. 93-102.
Fascicle 2: Special issue on Alchemy and Hermeticism, ed. Michela
PEREIRA (May 2000)
Michela PEREIRA: Introduction, pp. 115-120. – Paola CARUSI: Harmis
al-Harmisa dans l’alchimimie islamique. Une recherche par auteur et par
sujet, pp. 121-130. – Michela PEREIRA: Heavens on Earth. From the Tabula
Smaragdina to the Alchemical Fifth Essence, pp. 131-144. – Chiara
CRISCIANI: Hermeticism and Alchemy: The Case of Ludovico Lazzarelli, pp.
145-159. – Vittoria PERRONE COMPAGNI: “Dispersa Intentio.” Alchemy,
Magic, and Scepticism in Agrippa, pp. 160-177. – Zweder VON MARTELS:
Augurello’s Chrysopoeia (1515) – a Turning Point in the Literary
Tradition of Alchemical Texts, pp. 178-195. – William EAMON: Alchemy in
Popular Culture: Leonardo Fioravanti and the Search for the
Philosopher’s Stone, pp. 196-213. – Ferdinando ABBRI: Alchemy and
Chemistry: Chemical Discourses in the Seventeenth Century, pp. 214-226.
Fascicle 3 (August 2000)
Ian MACLEAN: Evidence, Logic, the Rule and the Exception in Renaissance
Law and Medicine, pp. 227-257. – OPEN FORUM: Debate between Andrew
Cunningham and Edward Grant – The Editors: The Nature of ‘Natural
Philosophy’: An Introduction, p. 258. – Andrew CUNNINGHAM: The Identity
of Natural Philosophy. A Response to Edward Grant, pp. 259-278. – Edward
GRANT: God and Natural Philosophy: the Late Middle Ages and Sir Isaac
Newton, pp. 279-298. – Andrew CUNNINGHAM: A Last Word, pp. 299-300.
Fascicle 4 (November 2000)
Michele CAMEROTA and Mario HELBING: Galileo and Pisan Aristotelianism:
Galileo’s De motu antiquiora and the Quaestiones de motu elementorum of
the Pisan Professors, pp. 319-366. – Jonathan WALMSLEY: Morbus, Locke’s
Early Essay on Disease, pp. 367-394.
Vol. 6 (2001)
Fascicle 1 (February 2001)
Andrew GREGORY: Aristotle, Dynamics, and Proportionality, pp. 1-21. –
Alexander FIDORA and Andreas NIEDERBERGER: Philosophie und Physik
zwischen notwendigem und hypothetischem Wissen. Zur wissenstheoretischen
Bestimmung der Physik in der Philosophia des Wilhelm von Conches, pp.
22-34. – Anita GUERRINI: Anatomizing the Renaissance [Review Essay on A.
Carlino, Books of the Body (Chicago, 2000); R. French: Dissection and
Vivisection in the European Renaissance (Aldershot, 1999); R. French:
Ancients and Moderns in the Medical Sciences (Aldershot, 2000)], pp.
35-38. – Sophie ROUX: L’art d’être classique [Review Essay on M. Blay
and R. Halleux: La science classique (Paris, 1998)], pp. 39-45.
Fascicle 2 (May 2001)
Domenico BERTOLONI MELI: Authorship and Teamwork around the Cimento
Academy: Mathematics, Anatomy, Experimental Philosophy, pp. 65-95. –
Mohammed ABATTOUY: Nutaf min al-Hiyal: A Partial Arabic Version of
Pseudo-Aristotle’s ‘Problemata Mechanica’, pp. 96-122. – Martha BALDWIN:
Patients’ Revenge: Judging Healers in Early Modern Italy [Review Essay
on G. Pomata: Contracting the Cure (Baltimore, 1998); D. Gentilcore:
Healers and Healing in Early Modern Italy (Manchester, 1998)], pp.
123-130.
Fascicle 3: Special issue on Walter Burley and William of Ockham, ed.
Silvia Donati (August 2001)
Silvia DONATI: Preface, pp. 147-148. – Edith SYLLA: Walter Burley’s
Physics Commentaries and the Mathematics of Alteration, pp. 149-184. –
Dirk-Jan DEKKER: Time and Motion in Walter Burley’s Late Expositio on
Aristotle’s Physics, pp. 185-203. – André GODDU: The Impact of Ockham’s
Reading of the Physics on the Mertonians and Parisian Terminists, pp.
204-237.
Fascicle 4 (November 2001): Special Issue “Science and Universities of
Early Modern Europe: Teaching, Specialization, Professionalization,” ed.
David A. Lines.
Nancy G. SIRAISI: Introduction, pp. 259-266. – David A. LINES: Natural
Philosophy in Renaissance Italy: The University of Bologna and the
Beginnings of Specialization, pp. 267-323. – Willem OTTERSPEER: The
University of Leiden–An Eclectic Institution, pp.324-333. – Joseph S.
FREEDMAN: “Professionalization” and “Confessionalization”: The Place of
Physics, Philosophy, and Arts Instruction at Central European Academic
Institutions during the Reformation Era, pp. 334-352. – Dennis DES
CHENE: Descartes in his Space and Time [Review Essay on R. Ariew,
Descartes and the Last Scholastics (1999); R. Ariew, J. Cottinham, T.
Sorell (eds.), Descartes’ Meditations. Background Source Materials
(1998)], pp. 353-361. – H. Floris COHEN: Global History of Science Comes
of Age [Review Essay on J. E. McClellan III and H. Dorn, Science and
Technology in World History. An Introduction (1999)], pp. 362-368.
Vol. 7 (2002)
Fascicle 1 (February 2002)
Craig MARTIN: Francisco Vallés and the Renaissance Reinterpretations of
Aristotle’s Meteorologica IV as a Medical Text, pp. 1-30. – Ku-Ming
(Kevin) CHANG: Fermentation, Phlogiston, and Matter Theory: Chemistry
and Natural Philosophy in Georg Ernst Stahl’s Zymotechnia Fundamentalis,
pp. 31-64. – Peter R. ANSTEY: Locke, Bacon and Natural History, pp.
65-92.
Fascicle 2 (May 2002)
John MUENDEL: The Manufacture of the Skullcap (Cervelliera) in the
Countryside of Florence during the Time of Dante and the Problem of
Identifying Michael Scot as its Inventor, pp. 93-120. – F.R.A. SCHMIDT:
Die Redefigur “Substanz A produziert Wirkung B” in den frühen
Rezeptarien und der materia medica der chinesischen Textkultur, pp.
121-137. – Boris S. OSTRER: Leprosy: Medical Views of Leviticus Rabba,
pp. 138-154.
Fascicle 3 (August 2002): Special Issue “Certainty, Truth, Error:
Aspects of the Practice of Pre- and Early Modern Practice. In Honour of
David A. King.” Eds. Sonja BRENTJES, Benno VAN DALEN, and François
CHARETTE.
Sonja BRENTJES, B. VAN DALEN, F. CHARETTE: Introduction, pp.173-178. –
David A. KING: Selected Bibliography, pp.179-180. – Jan P. HOGENDIJK:
The Burning Mirrors of Diocles. Reflections on the Methodology and
Purpose of the History of Pre-Modern Science, pp. 181-197. – Charles
BURNETT: The Certainty of Astrology in the Works of al-Qabisi and Abu
Ma’shar, pp. 198-213. – Jim BENNETT: Geometry in Context in the
Sixteenth Century: the View from the Museum, pp. 214-230. – Gerhard
ENDRESS: The Language of Demonstration. Translating Science and the
Formation of Terminology in Arabic Philosophy and Science, pp. 231-255.
– Tzvi LANGERMANN: Criticism of Authority in the Writings of Maimonides
and Fakhr al-Din al-Razi, pp. 255-275. – Dimitri GUTAS: Certainty,
Doubt, Error. Comments on the Epistemological Foundations of Medieval
Arabic Science, pp. 276-289. – Bernard R. GOLDSTEIN: Science and a
‘Neutral’ Zone for Interreligious Cooperation, pp. 290-291. – Anne
TIHON: Certainty, Doubt, and Errors in Byzantine Astronomy, pp. 292-293.
– Stephen C. McCLUSKEY: The Question of Easter: Changing Contexts and
Criteria for the Justification of Received Knowledge, pp. 294-295. –
Julio SAMSÓ: Is a Social History of Andalusí Exact Sciences Possible?
pp. 296-299. – Gerd GRASSHOFF: Contextualizing the History of Islamic
Sciences, pp. 300-310.
Fascicle 4 (November 2002)
Sebastià GIRALT: The Consilia Attributed to Arnau de Vilanova, pp.
311-356. – Peter R. ANSTEY: Robert Boyle and Locke’s “Morbus” Entry: A
Reply to J.C. Walmsley, pp. 358-377. – J.C. WALMSLEY: The Morbus Entry
again: A Reply to P.R. Anstey, pp. 378-397. – Plus 8 book reviews.
Vol. 8 (2003)
Fascicle 1 (February 2003)
Paul HUGHES: Implicit Carolingian Tidal Data, pp. 1-24. – Jos. M.V.
WELIE: Ignatius of Loyola on Medical Education, or: Should Today’s
Jesuits Continue to Run Health Sciences Schools?, pp. 26-44 – Julius
ROCCA: Galenic Dietetics [Review Essay on Mark Grant, Galen on Food and
Diet (London, 2000)], pp. 44-51. – Rose-Mary SARGENT: Boyle in
Seventeenth-Century Context [Review Essay on Peter R. Anstey, The
Philosophy of Robert Boyle (London, 2000) and Michael Hunter, Robert
Boyle (1627-91) (Woodbridge, 2001)], pp. 52-57 – Plus 13 further book
reviews.
Fascicle 2 (May 2003): Special Issue “Science and State Patronage in
Early Modern East Asia.” Ed. Catherine JAMI.
Catherine JAMI: Introduction, pp. 81-84. – Catherine JAMI and HAN Qi:
The Reconstruction of Imperial Mathematics in China during the Kangxi
Reign (1622-1722), pp. 88-110. – Marta HANSON: The Golden Mirror in the
Imperial Court of the Qianlong Emperor, 1739-1743, pp. 111-147. – Annick
HORIUCHI: When Science Develops outside State Patronage: Dutch Studies
in Japan at the Turn of the Nineteenth Century, pp. 148-172.
Fascicle 3 (August 2003)
Karl S. GUTHKE: Nightmare and Utopia: Extraterrestrial Worlds from
Galileo to Goethe, pp. 173-195.
Ferdinand Peter MOOG & Axel KARENBERG: Heilige als Patrone gegen
Schlaganfall, pp. 196-210.
Jole SHACKELFORD: Paracelsianism and the Orthodox Lutheran Rejection of
Vital Philosophy in Early Seventeenth-Century Denmark, pp. 210-252.
Ann CARMICHAEL, Plague and More Plagues [Review Essay on S.K. COHN, Jr.,
The Black Death Transformed: Disease and Culture in Early Renaissance
Europe (London, 2003) and S. SCOTT & C.J. DUNCAN, The Biology of
Platues: Evidence from Historical Populations (Cambridge, 2001)], pp.
253-266.
Book Reviews:
John J. CLEARY: Rev. of Dmitri NIKULIN, Matter, Imagination and
Geometry. Ontology, Natural Philosophy and Mathematics in Plotinus,
Proclus and Descartes (Aldershot, 2002)
Sebstià GIRALT: Rev. of Lluís CIFUENTES, La ciència en català a l’Edat
Mitjana I el Renaixement (Barcelona, 2002)
Gerhard BAADER: Rev. of Ralf VOLLMUTH, Traumatologie und Feldchirurgie
an der Wende vom Mittelalter zur Neuzeit (Stuttgart, 2001)
William DONAHUE: Rev. of James R. VOELKEL, The Composition of Kepler’s
Astronomia Nova (Princeton, 2001)
Sabetai UNGURU: Rev. of Johannes KEPLER, Optics, Paralipomena to Witelo
& Optical Part of Astronomy, ed. W.H. DONAHUE (Santa Fe, NM, 2000)
Jole SHACKELFORD: Rev. on William R. NEWMAN & Anthony GRAFTON (eds.),
Secrets of Nature: Astrology and Alchemy in Early Modern Europe
(Cambridge, Mass., 2001)
Liz HORODOWICH: Rev. of Brendan DOOLEY, Morandi’s Last Prophecy and the
End of Renaissance Politics (Princeton, 2002)
Bernard JOLY: Rev. of Michel BOUGARD, La chime de Nicolas Lemery
(Turnhout, 1999)
Volker R. REMMERT: Rev. of Mordechai FEINGOLD (ed.), Jesuit Science and
the Republic of Letters (Cambridge, Mass., 2003)
Helmut PULTE: Rev. of I. Bernard COHEN & George E. SMITH (eds.), The
Cambridge Companion to Newton (Cambridge, 2002)
John C. POWERS: Rev. of Rina KNOEFF, Herman Boerhaave (1668-1738):
Calvinist Chemist and Physician (Amsterdam, 2002)
Pascal DURIS: Rev. of Wilfrid BLUNT: Linnaeus. The Compleat Naturalist.
Intro. By W.T. STEARN (Princeton, 2001)
Fascicle 4 (November 2003): Special Issue “The Reception of Aristotle’s
Physical Works in the Middle Ages.” Ed. by Pieter DELEEMANS.
Pieter DELEEMANS: Introduction, pp. 291-292.
Jozef BRAMS: Selected Bibliography, pp. 293-296.
Paul BAKKER: Guiral Ot et le mouvement. Autour de la question De motu
conservée dans le manuscrit Madrid, Biblioteca Nacional, 4229, pp.
297-318.
Michael DUNNE: Thirteenth and Fourteenth-Century Commentaries on
Aristotle’s De longitudine et brevitate vitae, pp. 319-334.
Griet GALLE: Scholastic Explanation as to Why Local Motion Generates
Heat, pp. 335-369.
Jacqueline HAMESSE: Les instruments de travail philosophiques médiévaux.
Témoins de la réception d’Aristote, pp. 370-385.
Aafke VAN OPPENRAAY: The Reception of Aristotle’s History of Animals in
the Marginalia of Some Latin Manuscripts of Michael Scot’s Arabic-Latin
Translation, pp. 386-402.
Cecilia TRIFOGLI: Thomas Wylton against Minimal Times, pp. 403-416.
Vol. 9 (2004)
Fascicle 1 (February 2004)
Laurence M.V. TOTELIN: Mithradates’ Antidote—A Pharmacological Ghost,
pp. 1-19.
Karl S. GUTHKE: Kolonialphantasien in der populären Naturwissenschaft
der frühen Neuzeit, pp. 20-36
Jan P. HOGENDIJK: Ideals and Realities in Ibn al-Haytham’s Mathematical
Oeuvre [Review essay of Roshdi RASHED: Les mathématiques infinitésimales
du IXe au XIe siècle. Volume 4: Ibn al-Hatham, méthodes géométriques,
transformations ponctuelles, et philosophie des mathématiques (London,
2002)], pp. 37-43.
Book Reviews:
Craig MARTIN: Rev. of Cristina VIANO (ed.). Aristoteles chemicus: Il IV
libro dei Meteorologica nella tradizione antica e medievale (Sankt
Augustin, 2002).
Eberhard KNOBLOCH: Rev. of Yvonne DOLD-SAMPLONIUS, J.W. DAUBEN, V. MENSO
& B. VAN DALEN (eds.), From China to Paris: 2000 Years Transmission of
Mathematical Ideas (Stuttgart, 2002).
James T. ROBINSON: Rev. of Roger ARNALDEZ. Averroes: A Rationalist in
Islam (Notre Dame, 2000).
Mary K.K. YEARL: Rev. of Peggy McCRACKEN. The Curse of Eve, the Wound of
the Hero. Blood, Gender, and Medieval Literature (Philadelphia, 2003).
Sarah CLINE: Rev. of Noble David COOK. Born to Die: Disease and New
World Conquest, 1492-1650 (Cambridge, 1998).
Anthony GRAFTON: Rev. of Owen GINGERICH. An Annotated Census of
Copernicus’ De Revolutionibus (Nuremberg, 1543 and Basel, 1566) (Leiden,
2002).
Doug JESSEPH: Rev. of Jürgen RENN (ed.), Galileo in Context (Cambridge,
2001).
Ferdinando ABBRI: Rev. of William R. NEWMAN & Lawrence M. PRINCIPE.
Alchemy Tried in the Fire. Starkey, Boyle, and the Fate of Helmontian
Chymistry (Chicago, 2002).
Nicole HOWARD: Rev. of Jim BENNETT, Michael COOPER, Michael HUNTER, and
Lisa JARDINE (eds.). London’s Leonardo: The Life and Work of Robert
Hooke (Oxford, 2003).
Niccolò GUICCIARDINI: Rev. of Ofer GAL. Meanest Foundations and Nobler
Superstructures: Hooke, Newton and the “Compounding of the Celestiall
Motions of the Planetts” (Dordrecht, 2002).
John C. POWERS: Rev. of Gerhard WIESENFELDT. Leerer Raum in Minervas
Haus: Experimentelle Naturlehre an der Universität Leiden, 1675-1715
(Amsterdam, 2002).
Michiyo NAKANE: Rev. of J.Christiaan BOUDRI. What Was Mechanical about
Mechanics? The Concept of Force between Metaphysics and Mechanics from
Newton to Lagrange (Dordrecht, 2002).
Jonathan SHEEHAN: Rev. of Anke TE HEESEN. The World in a Box: The Story
of an Eighteenth-Century Picture Encyclopedia (Chicago, 2002).
Peter L. McDERMOTT: Rev. of Gary B. FERNGREN (ed.). Science and
Religion: A Historical Introduction (Baltimore, 2002).
Fascicle 2 (May 2004)
John HENRY: Metaphysics and the Origins of Modern Science: Descartes and
the Importance of Laws of Nature, pp. 73-114.
Monica AZZOLINI: Anatomy of a Dispute: Leonardo, Pacioli and Scientific
Courtly Entertainment in Renaissance Milan, pp. 115-135.
Martin WORTHINGTON: Planets, Livers and Omens in Mesopotamia [Review
Essay of D. Brown, Mesopotamian Planetary Astronomy-Astrology
(Groningen, 2000), and T. Abusch & K. van der Toorn (eds.), Mesopotamian
Magic: Textual, Historical and Interpretative Perspectives (Groningen,
2000)], pp. 136-143.
Brian VICKERS: Bacon for Our Times [Review Essay on The Oxford Francis
Bacon, vol. IV (The Advancement of Learning, ed. M. Kiernan) and vol.
XIII (The ‘Instauratio magna’: Last Writings, ed. G. Rees) (both Oxford,
2000)], pp. 144-162.
Book Reviews:
Michael EDWARDS: Rev. of Geoffrey CHAUCER, A Treatise on the Astrolabe,
ed. Sigmund EISNER (Norman, OK, 2002)
Jill MEEKINS: Rev. of Roger FRENCH: Medicine before Science: The
Rational and Learned Doctor from the Middle Ages to the Enlightenment
(Cambridge, 2003)
Marc VAN DER POEL: Rev. of Rudolph AGRICOLA, Letters, ed. and transl. A.
VAN DER LAAN & F. AKKERMAN (Assen, 2002)
E.J. ASHWORTH: Rev. of Ian MACLEAN, Logic, Signs and Nature in the
Renaissance: The Case of Learned Medicine (Cambridge, 2002)
Kjell LUNDQUIST: Rev. of John Robert CHRISTIANSON, On Tycho’s Island.
Tycho Brahe, Science, and Culture in the Sixteenth Century (Cambridge,
2003)
Miguel A. GRANADA: Rev. of Rienk VERMIJ, The Calvinist Copernicans. The
Reception of the New Astronomy in the Dutch Republic, 1575-1750
(Amsterdam, 2002)
Matt JONES, Rev. of Mordechai FEINGOLD (ed.), The New Science and Jesuit
Science: Seventeenth Century Perspectives (Dordrecht, 2003)
Robert HALLEUX: Rev. of Lawrence M. PRINCIPE & Lloyd DE WIT,
Transmutations: Alchemy in Art. Selected Works from the Eddleman and
Fisher Collections at the Chemical Heritage Foundation (Philadelphia,
2002)
Michael R. LYNN: Rev. of Mary TERRALL, The Man Who Flattened the Earth:
Maupertuis and the Sciences in the Enlightenment (Chicago, 2002)
Alexander BROADIE: Rev. of Thomas REID, The Correspondence of Thomas
Reid, ed. Paul WOOD (Edinburgh, 2002)
Hans LAUSCH: Rev. of Meir BUZAGLO, Solomon Maimon: Monism, Scepticism,
and Mathematics (Pittsburgh, 2002)
Elizabeth Heckendorn COOK: Rev. of Ted DADSWELL, The Selborne Pioneer:
Gilbert White as Naturalist and Scientist: A Re-Examination (Aldershot,
2003)
Trudy EDEN: Rev. of Charles ROSENBERG (ed.), Right Living: An
Anglo-American Tradition of Self-Help Medicine and Hygiene (Baltimore,
2003)
Fascicle 3 (August 2004). Special Issue: Newtonianism: Mathematical and
‘Experimental’. Guest Editor: Alan E. Shapiro
Alan E. SHAPIRO: Newton’s ‘Experimental Philosophy’, pp. 185-217.
Niccolò GUICCIARDINI: Dot-Age: Newton’s Mathematical Legacy in the
Eighteenth Century, pp. 218-256. J.B. SHANK: “There Was no such Thing as
the ‘Newtonian Revolution’, and the French Initiated It.”
Eighteenth-Century Mechanics in France before Maupertuis, pp. 257-292.
Fascicle 4 (November 2004)
Noel MALCOLM: Robert Boyle, Georges Pierre des Clozets, and the
Asterism: A New Source, pp. 293-206. Lawrence M. PRINCIPE: George Pierre
des Clozets, Robert Boyle, the Alchemical Patriarch of Antioch, and the
Reunion of Christendom: Further New Sources, pp. 307-320. Dirk L.
COUPRIE: How Thales Was Able to ‘Predict’ a Solar Eclipse without the
Help of Alleged Mesopotamian Wisdom, pp. 321-337. Julius ROCCA:
Evaluating Hippocrates the Younger [Rev. Essay on Philip J. VAN DER
EIJK, Diocles of Carystus, 2 vols. (Leiden, 2000/1)], pp. 338-347. André
GODDU: Nicole Oresme and Modernity [Rev. Essay on Ultrich TASCHOW,
Nicole Oresme und der Frühling der Moderne (Halle, 2003)], pp. 348-359.
Book Reviews:
Ian JOHNSTON: Rev. of Julius ROCCA, Galen on the Brain. Anatomical
Knowledge and Physiological Speculation in the Second Century AD
(Leiden, 2003), pp. 360-362. Julius ROCCA: Rev. of Luis
GARCÍA-BALLESTER, Galen and Galenism: Theory and Medical Practice from
Antiquity to the European Renaissance, eds. J. ARRIZABALAGE et al.
(Aldershot, 2002), pp. 362-364. Guido GIGLIONI: Rev. of Jole AGRIMI,
‘Ingeniosa scientia nature’, Studi sulla fisiognomica medievale
(Florence, 2002), pp. 364-366. Bruce T. MORAN: Rev. of Wilhelm KÜHLMANN
and JOACHIM TELLE (eds.), Corpus Paracelsisticum. Dokumente
frühneuzeitlicher Naturphilosophie in Deutschland (vol. 1) (Tübingen,
2001), pp. 367-368. Christine M. PETTO: Rev. of Charles W.J. WITHERS,
Geography, Science and National Identity: Scotland since 1520
(Cambridge, 2001), pp. 369-370. H. Darrel RUTKIN: Rev. of Tommaso
CAMPANELLA, Opuscoli astrologici: Come evitare il fato astrale,
Apologetico, Disputa sulle bolle, ed. Germana ERNST (Milan, 2003), pp.
370-371. Millie GIMMEL: Rev. of David FREEDBERG, The Eye of the Lynx:
Galileo, his Friends and the Beginnings of Modern Natural History
(Chicago, 2003), pp. 371-373. Philip STEADMAN: Rev. of Robert D. HUERTA,
Giants of Delft. Johannes Vermeer and the Natural Philosophers: The
Parallel Search for Knowledge during the Age of Discovery (Lewisburg,
PA, 2003), pp. 373-376. Nicole HOWARD on Mario BIAGIOLI and Peter
GALISON (eds.), Scientific Authorship: Credit and Property in Science
(New York, 2003), pp. 376-378.
Vol. 10 (2005)
Fascicle 1 (February 2005)
Hiro HIRAI: Alter Galenus: Jean Fernel et Son Interprétation
Platonico-Chrétienne de Galien, pp. 1-35. Stephen PENDER: Between
Medicine and Rhetoric, pp. 36-64. Rémi FRANCKOWIAK & Luc PETERSCHMITT,
La chimie de Homberg: une vérité certaine dans une physique contestable,
pp. 65-90. John NORTH: Aristotle’s Empiricism [Review Essay on L.M. de
Rijk: De Rol van de Taal in het Empirisme van Aristoteles (Amsterdam,
2004], pp. 91-97. Carla Rita PALMERINO: Pierre Gassendi’s Life and
Letters [Review Essay on Sylvie Taussig: Pierre Gassendi (3 vols.)
(Turnhout, 2003-4)], pp. 98-106.
Book Reviews:
Julius ROCCA: Rev. of Owen POWELL, Galen. On the Properties of
Foodstuffs (Cambridge, 2003), pp. 107-109. Alexander JONES: Rev. of Liba
TAUB, Ancient Meteorology (London, 2003), pp. 109-110. Gerhard BAADER:
Rev. of Raphaela VEIT, Das Buch der Fieber des Isaac Israeli und seine
Bedeutung im lateinischen Westen. Ein Beitrag zur Rezeption arabischer
Wissenschaft im Abendland (Stuttgart, 2003), pp. 111-112. Joachim TELLE:
Rev. of Veelre FRAETERS, Gods gouden thesaurus. Het Middelnderlandse
handschrift Wenen, ONB, 2372 in de alchemistische traditie (Louvain,
1999), pp. 113-114. Ulrich G. LEINSLE: Rev. of Russell L. FRIEDMAN &
Lauge O. NIELSEN (eds.), The Medieval Heritage in Early Modern
Metaphysics and Modal Theory, 1400-1700 (Dordrecht, 2003), pp. 114-116.
William J.H. ANDREWES: Rev. of Koenraad Van Cleempoel, A Catalogue
Raisonné of Scientific Instruments from the Louvain School, 1530-1600
(Turnhout, 2002), pp. 116-117. Aline STEINBRECHER: Rev. of Katharina
HUBER, Felix Platters “Observationes”, Studien zum frühneuzeitlichen
Gesundheitswesen in Basel (Basel, 2003), pp. 118-119. Klaas VAN BERKEL:
Rev. of Benedino GEMELLI, Isaac Beeckman. Atomista e lettore critico di
Lucrezio (Florence, 2002), pp. 119-121. Ofer GAL: Rev. of Lisa JARDIINE,
The Curious Life of Robert Hooke: The Man Who Measured London (New York,
2004), pp. 121-122, Mary TERRALL: Rev. of Elizabeth A. WILLIAMS, A
Cultural History of Medical Vitalism in Enlightenment Montpellier
(Aldershot, 2003), pp. 123-124.
Fascicle 2 (May 2005): Special Issue “Optics, Instruments and Painting,
1420-1720. Reflections on the Hockney-Falco Thesis,” ed. Sven Dupré
Sven DUPRÉ: Introduction. The Hockney-Falco Thesis: Constraints and
Opportunities, pp. 125-136. Sara J. SCHECHNER: Between Knowing and
Doing: Mirrors and their Imperfections in the Renaissance, pp. 137-162.
A. Mark SMITH: Optical Theory and Artistic Practice in the Fifteenth and
Sixteenth Centuries, pp. 163-185. Yvonne YIU: The Mirror and Painting in
Early Renaissance Texts, pp. 187-210. Sven DUPRÉ: Optics, Pictures and
Evidence: Leonardo's Drawings of Mirrors and Machinery, pp. 211-236.
Antoni MALET: Early Conceptualizations of the Telescope as an Optical
Instrument, pp. 237-262. Filippo CAMEROTA: Looking for an Artificial
Eye: On the Borderline between Painting and Topography, pp. 263-285.
Philip STEADMAN: Allegory, Realism, and Vermeer's Use of the Camera
Obscura, pp. 287-313. Christoph LÜTHY: Hockney's Secret Knowledge,
Vanvitelli's Camera Obscura, pp. 313-339.
Fascicle 3 (August 2005): Special Issue “Openness and Secrecy in Early
Modern Science,” ed. Karel Davids
Karel DAVIDS: Introduction. Craft Secrecy in Europe in the Early Modern
Period: A Comparative View, pp. 341-348.
Reinhold REITH: Know How, Technologietransfer und die arcana artis im
Mitteleuropa der frühen Neuzeit, pp. 349-377.
Anne-Françoise GARÇON: Les dessous des métiers: Secrets, rites et
sous-traitance dans la France du XVIIIe siècle, pp. 378-391.
Larry STEWART: Science, Instruments, and Guilds in Early-Modern Britain,
pp. 392-410.
Karel DAVIDS: Public Knowledge and Common Secrets. Secrecy and its
Limits in the Early-Modern Netherlands, pp. 411-427.
Daniel GARBER: Making Conversation [Rev. Essay on Kathleen Wellman,
Making Science Social: The Conferences of Théophraste Renaudot 1633-1642
(Norman, OK, 2003)], pp. 428-434.
Book Reviews:
Peter L. McDERMOTT: Rev. of Ian & Jenifer GLYNN, The Life and Death of
Smallpox (Cambridge, 2004), pp. 435-36.
James T. ROBINSON: Rev. of Majid FAKHRY, Averroes (Ibn Rushd): His Life,
Works and Influence (Oxford, 2001), pp. 436-439.
Millie GIMMEL: Rev. of Londa SCHIEBINGER, Plants and Empire: Colonial
Bioprospecting in the Atlantic World (Cambridge, Mass., 2004), pp.
439-441. David MARSHALL: Rev. of Eugenio CANONE, Il dorso e il grembo
dell’eterno: Percorsi della filosofia di Giordano Bruno (Pisa/Rome,
2003), pp. 441-42.
Steven HARRIS: Rev. of Yasmin Annabel HASKELL, Loyola’s Bees. Ideology
and Industry in Jesuit Latin Didactic Poetry (Oxford, 2003), pp. 442-44.
Brian S. BAIGRIE & Elise PARDIS: Rev. of Wolfgang LEFÈVRE, Jürgen RENN
and Urs SCHOEPFLIN (eds.), The Power of Images in Early Modern Science
(Basel, 2003), pp 444-46.
Paula LEE: Rev. of Erica FUDGE, Perceiving Animals: Humans and Beasts in
Early Modern English Culture (Urbana/Chicago, 2002); Erica FUDGE, Ruth
GILBERT & Susan WISEMAN (eds.), At the Borders of the Human: Beasts,
Bodies, and Natural Philosophy in the Early Modern Period (Basingstoke,
1999), pp.447-49.
Paula LEE: Rev. of Louise E. ROBBINS, Elephant Slaves and Pampered
Parrots: Exotic Animals in Eighteenth-Century Paris (Baltimore, 2002),
pp. 449-51.
Michael STOLBERG: Rev. of Jürgen Helm & Karin Stukenbrock (eds.),
Anatomie. Sektionen einer medizinischen Wissenschaft im 18. Jahrhundert
(Wiesbaden, 2003), pp. 451-52.
Fascicle 4 (November 2005)
Hiro HIRAI & Hideyuki YOSHIMOTO: Anatomizing the Sceptical Chymist:
Robert Boyle and the Secret of His Early Sources on the Growth of
Metals, pp. 453-477. Margaret D. GARBER: Chymical Wonders of Light: J.
Marcus Marci’s Seventeenth-Century Bohemian Optics, pp. 478-510.
Open Forum, ed. Niccolò GUICCIARDINI: Newton vs. Hooke on Gravitation:
Niccolò Guicciardini: Reconsidering the Hooke-Newton Debate on
Gravitation: Recent Results, pp. 511-517. Michael NAUENBERG: Hooke’s and
Newton’s Contributions of the Early Development of Orbital Dynamics and
the Theory of Universal Gravitation, pp. 518-528. Ofer GAL: The
Invention of Celestial Mechanics, pp. 529-534. Domenico BERTOLONI MELI:
Who Is Afraid of Centrifugal Force?, pp. 535-541. General Bibliography
on the Hooke-Newton controversy, pp. 541-543,
Michele CAMEROTA’s New Biography of Galileo (Galileo Galilei e la
cultura scientifica nell’età della Contrariforma [Rome, 2004]):
Presentation, by Domenico BERTOLONI MELI, p. 544; Review Essay I, by
Maurice A. FINOCCHIARO, pp. 545-57; Review Essay II, by Paolo PALMIERI,
pp. 557-59; Review Essay III, by Steffen DUCHEYNE, pp. 560-565.
Karin TYBJERG: The Point of Archimedes [Review Essay on Reviel NETZ, The
Transformation of Mathematics in the Early Mediterranean World: From
Problems to Equations (Cambridge, 2004); NETZ, The Works of Archimedes
Translated into English, vol. 1 (Cambridge, 2004)] , pp. 566-77.
Vol. 11 (2006)
Fascicle 1 (February 2006)
Zbigniew BELA: Who Invented ‘Avicenna’s Gilded Pills’?, pp. 1-10.
Tobias CHEUNG: The Hidden Order of Preformation: Plans, Functions, and
Hierarchies in the Organic Systems of Louis Bourguet, Charles Bonnet and
Georges Cuvier, pp. 11-49.
Thomas RÜTTEN: Ludwig Edelstein at the Crossroads of 1933. On the
Inseparability of Life, Work, and Their Reverberations, pp. 50-99.
Book Reviews:
Jole SHAKELFORD: Rev. of Stanton J. LINDEN, The Alchemy Reader: From
Hermes Trismegistus to Isaac Newton (Cambridge, 2003), pp. 100-101.
John NORTH: Rev. of Roshdi RASHED, Oevure mathématique d’al-Sijzi. Vol.
1: Géométrie des coniques et théorie des nombres au Xe siècle
(Louvain/Paris, 2004), pp. 101-04.
Nadja GERMANN: Rev. of Barbara OBRIST, ed., Abbon de Fleury.
Philosophie, sciences et comput autour de l’an Mil. Actes des journées
organisées par le Centre d’histoire des sciences et des philosophies
arabes et médiévales (Paris, 2004), pp. 104-06.
André GODDU: Rev. of H.L.L. BUSARD, Johannes de Tinemue’s Redaction of
Euclid’s Elements, the So-called Adelard III Version (Stuttgart, 2001),
pp. 107-08.
Giovanna CIFOLETTI: Rev. of Maryvonne Spiesser, Une arithmétique
commerciale du XVe siècle. Le ‘Compendy de la praticque des nombres’ de
Barthélémy de Romans (Turnhout, 2003), pp. 108-11.
Alison SANDMAN: Rev. of David BUISSERET, The Mapmaker’s Quest: Depicting
New Worlds in Renaissance Europe (Oxford, 2005); Rev. of Ricardo PADRÓN,
The Spacious Word: Cartography, Literature, and Empire in Early Modern
Spain (Chicago, 2003), pp. 111-13.
H. Darrel RUTKIN: Rev. of Günther OESTMANN, Heinrich Rantzau und die
Astrologie: Ein Beitrag zur Kulturgeschichte des 16. Jahrhunderts
(Braunschweig, 2004), pp. 113-15.
Jochen BÜCHEL on Hanns-Peter NEUMANN, Natura sagax – Die geistige Natur.
Zum Zusammenhang von Naturphilosophie und Mystik in der frühen Neuzeit
am Beispiel Johann Arndts (Tübingen, 2004), pp. 115-17.
Guido GIGLIONI: Rev. of Hiro HIRAI, Le concept de semence dans les
theories de la matière à la Renaissance de Marsile Ficin à Pierre
Gassendi (Turnhout, 2005), pp. 117-19.
André GODDU: Rev. of Georg SCHUPPENER & Karel MAČÁK, Prager
Jesuiten-Mathematik von 1600-1740 (Leipzig, 2002), pp. 119-22.
Mary DOMSKI: Rev. of Michael BEN-CHAIM, Experimental Philsophy and the
Birth of Empirical Science: Boyle, Locke and Newton (Hampshire, 2004),
pp. 122-26.
Steffen DUCHEYNE: Rev. of Margaret C. JACOB & Larry STEWART, Practical
Matter. Newton’s Science in the Service of Industry and Empire,
1687-1851 (Cambridge, 2004), pp. 126-28.
Neil SAFIER: Rev. of John DUNMORE, ed. and transl., The Pacific Journal
of Louis-Antoine de Bougainville, 1767-68 (London, 2002), pp. 128-29.
Paula LEE: Rev. of Eric BARATAY & Elizabeth HARDOUIN-FUGIER, Zoo: A
History of Zoological Gardens in the West (London, 2004), pp. 129-31.
John GASCOIGNE: Rev. of Tim FULFORD, Debbie LEE & Peter J. KITSON,
Literature, Science and Exploration in the Romantic Era. Bodies of
Knowledge (Cambridge, 2004), pp. 131-33.
Fascicle 2 (May 2005)
Craig MARTIN: With Aristotelians like These, Who Needs
Anti-Aristotelians? Chymical Corpuscular Matter Theory in Niccolò
Cabeo’s Meteorology, pp. 135-61.
Antoine CALVET: Étude d’un texte alchimique latin du XIVe siècle: Le
‘Rosarius philosophorum’ attribué au médecin Arnaud de Villeneuve (ob.
1311), pp. 162-206.
Elaheh KHEIRANDISH: The ‘Fluctuating Fortunes of Scholarship’: A Very
Late Review Occasioned by a Fallen Book [review essay on David E.P.
JACKSON, “Scholarship in Abbasid Baghdad with Special Reference to Greek
Mechanics in Arabic,” Quaderni di Studi Arabi, Università degli Studi di
Venezia 5/6 (1987/88), 369-90], pp. 207-22.
Book Reviews:
Anita GUERRINI: Rev. of Roy PORTER, Blood and Guts. A Short History of
Medicine (New York, 2002), pp. 223-24.
Ronald J. MORGAN: Rev. of Daniel T. REFF, Plagues, Priests, and Demons:
Sacred Narratives and the Rise of Christianity in the Old World and the
New (Cambridge, 2005), pp. 225-26.
Jürgen SARNOWSKY: Rev. of PETER OF AUVERGNE, Questions on Aristotle’s
‘De Caelo’. A Critical Edition with an interpret. essay by Griet GALLE
(Leuven, 2003), pp. 227-28.
Barbara OBRIST: Rev. of Pascale BARTHÉLEMY, La Sedacina ou l’Œuvre au
crible. L’alchimie de Guillaume Sedacer, carme catalan de la fin du XIVe
siècle (Paris, 2002), pp. 229-30.
Luca BIANCHI: Rev. of Pietro POMPONAZZI, Expositio zuper primo et
secundo De partibus animalium, ed. Stefano PERFETTI (Florence, 2004),
pp. 231-33.
Simona VUCU: Rev. of Christophe GRELLARD, Croire et savoir. Les
Principes de la connaissance selon Nicolas d’Autrécourt (Paris, 2005),
pp. 234-36.
Robert A. ERICKSON: Rev. of Gail KERN PASTER, Humoring the Body:
Emotions and the Shakespearean Stage (Chicago, 2005), pp. 237-39.
Eve KELLER: Rev. of Claire PRESTON, Thomas Browne and the Writing of
Early Modern Science (Cambridge, 2005), pp. 240-41.
Tassie GNIADY: Rev. of Elizabeth SPILLER, Science, Reading, and
Renaissance Literature: The Art of Making Knowledge, 1580-1670
(Cambridge, 2004), pp. 242-43.
Ann G. CARMICHAEL: Rev. of David Shumway JONES, Rationalizing Epidemics:
Meanings and Uses of American Indian Mortality since 1600 (…), pp.
244-46.
Fascicle 3 (August 2006)
Ian MACLEAN: The ‘Sceptical Crisis’ Reconsidered: Galen, Rational
Medicine and the ‘Libertas philosophandi’, pp. 247-74.
Michael R. McVAUGH: Niccolò da Reggio’s Translations of Galen and their
Reception in France, pp. 275-301.
Matthew KLEMM: Medicine and Moral Virtue in the ‘Expositio Problematum
Aristotelis’ of Peter of Abano, pp. 302-335. Joachim TELLE: Zur
Alchemiegeschichte vom Spätmittelalter bis zum Anfang des 17.
Jahrhunderts [review essay on Chiara CRISCIANI & Agostino PARAVICINI
BAGLIANI, eds., Alchimia e medicina nel Medioevo (Florence, 2003);
Annelies VAN GIJSEN, Joos Balbian en de steen der wijzen. De
alchemistische nalatenschap van een zestiende-eeuwse arts (Louvain:
2004)], pp. 336-44.
Book Reviews:
Jordi CAT: Rev. of Lorraine DASTON and Fernando VIDAL, eds., The Moral
Authority of Nature (Chicago, 2004), pp. 345-346.
Charles BURNETT: Rev. of Abdelhamid I. SABRA, Kitab al Manazir (The
Optics) of al-Hasan ibn al-Haytham, Book IV-V, On Reflection, and Images
Seen by Reflection (Kuweit, 2002), pp. 347-48.
Femke KOK: Rev. of Matthias LUTZ-BACHMANN, Alexander FIDORA & Andreas
NIEDERBERGER, Metaphysics in the Twelfth Century. On the Relationship
among Philosophy, Science and Theology (Turnhout, 2004), pp. 349-52.
Petty BANGE: Rev. of Bruno LAURIOUX, Une histoire culinaire du Moyen Age
(Paris, 2005), pp. 352-53.
Cees LEIJENHORST: Rev. of Luca BIANCHI, Studi sull’aristotelismo del
Rinascimento (Padua, 2003), pp. 354-56.
James EVANS: Rev. of Michal KOKOWSKI, Copernicus’s Originality: Towards
Integration of Contemporary Copernican Studies (Warsaw, 2004), pp.
357-59.
Steven VANDEN BROECKE: Rev. of Owen GINGERICH, The Book Nobody Read.
Chasing the Revolution of Nicolaus Copernicus (New York, 2004), pp.
360-61.
Frédéric DE BUZON: Rev. of Theo VERBEEK, Erik Jan BOS & Jeroen VAN DE
VEN, eds., The Correspondence of René Descartes 1643 (Utrecht, 2003),
pp. 262-64.
Mihnea DOBRE: Rev. of Fred ABLONDI, Géraud de Cordemoy: Atomist,
Occasionalist, Cartesian (Milwaukee, 2005), pp. 265-67.
Letters to the Editor, p. 268.
Fascicle 4 (November 2006): Special Fascicle “The Art of Thinking
Mathematically,” ed. Giovanna Cifoletti
Giovanna CIFOLETTI: Mathematics and Rhetoric: Introduction, pp. 369-89.
Giovanna CIFOLETTI: From Valla to Viète: The Rhetorical Reform of Logic
and its Use in Early Modern Algebra, pp. 390-423.
Christia MERCER: Leibniz on Mathematics, Methodology, and the Good: A
Reconsideration of the Place of Mathematics in Leibniz’ Philosophy, pp.
424-54.
Éric BRIAN: Combinaisons et disposition. Langue universelle et géométrie
de situation chez Condorcet (1793-1794), pp. 455-77.
|