Scientific Revolution Bibliography - Scientific Revolution Home Page - Dr Robert A. Hatch - University of Florida - http://www.clas.ufl.edu/users/rhatch
T H E    S C I E N T I F I C     R E V O L U T I O N
C L A S S I C   &   H I S T O R I O G R A P H I C    S O U R C E S
Dr  Robert  A. Hatch  -  University  of  Florida



General Works


Boas, Marie. The Scientific Renaissance: 1450-1630. NY: Harper, 1965. 

Bonelli, Maria L.R.; William R. Shea (eds.). Reason, Experiment, and Mysticism in the Scientific Revolution. NY: Science History, 1975. 

Burtt, E.A. The Metaphysical Foundations of Modern Science. 2nd ed. 1932. Garden City: Doubleday Anchor, 1954. 

Butterfield, Herbert. The Origins of Modern Science 1300-1800. 1957. NY: Free Pr., 1968. 

Cohen, I. Bernard. The Birth of a New Physics. Garden City, NY: 1960. 

Crombie, A.C. Medieval and Early Modern Science. 2 vols. (orginally issued as Augustine to Galileo). Garden City, NY: 1959. 

Forbes, R. J.; E. J. Dijksterhuis. A History of Science and Technology. 2 vols. Baltimore: Penguine, 1963. 

Hall, A. Rupert. From Galileo to Newton: 1630-1720. NY: Harper, 1963. 

_____. The Scientific Revolution, 1500-1700. 1954. Boston: Beacon, 1966. 

Hall, Marie Boas. Nature and Nature's Laws: Documents of the Scientific Revolution. NY: Harper, 1970. 

Haydn, Hiram. The Counter-Renaissance. NY: Harcourt-Brace, 1950. 

Hesse, Mary. Forces and Fields. London, 1961. 

Kearney, Hugh F., ed. Origins of the Scientific Revolution. New York, 1967. 

_____. Science and Change: 1500-1700. NY: Mcgraw-Hill, 1971. 

Koyre, Alexandre. From the Closed World to the Infinite Universe. Harper, 1958. 

Kuhn, Thomas S. The Structure of Scientific Revolutions. 2nd ed. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1970. 

McLean, Antonia. Humanism and the Rise of Science in Tudor England. NY: Science History, 1972. 

Palter, Robert M., ed. Toward Modern Science. 2 vols. New York: 1961. 

Sarton, George. Appreciations of Ancient and Medieval Science During the Renaissance (1450-1600). NY: Barnes, 1961. 

_____. Six Wings: Men of Science in the Renaissance. Bloomington: 1957. 

Smith, A.G.R. Scinece and Society in the 16th and 17th Centuries. London: Thames & Hudson, 1972. 

Thorndike, Lynn. A History of Magic and Experimental Science. 8 vols. NY: Columbia U P, 1923-58. 

Wade, Ira. The Intellectual Origins of the French Englightenment

Webster, Charles. The Great Instauration: Science, Medicine, and Reform, 1626-1660. London: Duckworth, 1975. 

Westfall, Richard S. The Construction of Modern Science: Mechanism and Mechnics. New York: 1971. 

Wightman, W.P.D. Science in a Renaissance Society. London: Hutchinson, 1972. 

_____. Science and the Renaissance. 2 vols. Edinburgh: Oliver & Boyd, 1962. 

Wolf, Abraham. A History of Science, Technology, and Philosophy in the 16th and 17th centuries. 2nd ed. 2 vols. NY: Harper, 1959.

 




'External Roots' of the Scientific Revolution

Basalla, George, ed. The Rise of Modern Science: Internal or External Factors. Lexington, MA: 1968. 

Ben-David, Joseph. The Scientific Role: The Conditions of its Establishment in Europe. Minerva: 1965. 4:15-54. 

Brown, Harcourt. 'The Renaissance and Hisotorians of Science.' Studies in the Renaissance 7 (1960): 27-42. 

_____. 'The Utilitarian Motive in the Age of Descartes.' AS i (1936): 182. 

Bullough, Vern L., ed. The Scientific Revolution. New York: 1970. 

______. 'Education Confilct and the Development of Science in the Renaissance.' Bucknell Rev. 15 (1967): 35-45. 

Burtt, Edwin A. The Metaphysical Foundations of Modern Science. 2nd ed. 1932. Garden City: oubleday Anchor, 1954. 

Clark, George. Science and Social Welfare in the Age of Newton. 2nd ed. 1949. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1970. 

Crombie, A.C. 'Historians and the Scientific Revolution.' Endeavour 19 (1960): 9-13. 

Feuer, Lewis S. The Scientific Intellecutal: The Psychological and Sociological Origins of Modern Science. esp. pp 1-22. NY: Basic, 1963. 

Goldman, Steven L. 'Alexander Kojeve on the Origin of Modern Science: Sociological Modelling Gone Away.' Studies in the History and Philosophy of Science 6 (1975): 113-124. 

Hall, A. Rupert. 'On the Historical Singularity of the Scientific Revolution of the 17th Century.' The Diversity of History. Ed. J.H. Elliott et al. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1970. 199-221. 

_____. 'Merton Revisited or Science and Society in the Seventeenth Century.' History of Science. Vol. 2. Reprinted in Basalla: 1960. 1-16. 

_____. 'The Scholar and the Craftsman in the Scientific Revolution.' Critical Problems in the History of Science. Ed. Marshall Clagett. Madison: U of Wisconsin P, 1959. 3-23. 

Hill Christopher. The Intellectual Origins of the English Revolution. London: Oxford UP, 1965.

Horsky, Zdenek. 'Le role du phantonisme dans l'origine de la cosmologie moderne.' Organon 4 (1967): 47-54. 

Jones, Harold W. 'Some Reflections on the Beginnings of Experimental Science.' Annals of Science 6 (1950): 283-292. 

Kearney, Hugh F., ed. Origins of the Scientific Revolution. NY: Barnes & Noble, 1964. 

King, M.D. 'Reason, Tradition and the Progressiveness of Science.' History and Threory 10 (1971): 3-32. 

Kojeve, Alexandre. 'L'origine Chretienne de la science moderne.' Melanges Alesandre Koyre. Vol 2. 295-306. Paris: Harmann, 1964. 

Kuhn, Thomas S. 'Mathematical vs. Experimental Traditions in the Development of Physical Science.' Journal of Interdisciplinary History 7 (1976): 1-32. 

_____. 'Scientific Growth: Reflections on Ben-David's `Scientific role.'' Minerva 10 (1972): 166-178. 

Koyre, Alexandre. 'The Origins of Modern Science: A New Interpretation.' Diogenes 16 (1956): 1-22. 

Merton, Robertt K. Science, Technology and Society in 17th-century England. 1938. NY: Harper Torchbook, 1970. 

Mittelstrass, Jurgen. 'Remarks on Nominalistic Roots of Modern Science.' Organon 4 (1967): 39-46. 

Nef, John U. 'The Genesis of Industrialism and of Modern Science,1540-1640.' Essays in Honor of Conyers Read. Ed. Norman Downs. 200-269. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1952. Rpt. The Conquest of the Material World. 268-328. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1964. 

Rattansi, P.M. 'The Social Interpretation of Science in the 17th Century.' Science adn Society, 1600-1900. Ed. Peter Mathias. 1-32. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1972. 

Rosen, Edward. 'Renaissance Science as Seen by Burckhardt and his Successors.' The Renaissance: A Reconsideration of the Theories and Interpretations. Ed. Tinsley Helton. 80-98. Madison: U of Wisconson P, 1961. 

Ross, Richard. 'The Social and Economic Causes of the Revolution in the Mathematical Sciences in Mid-17th Century England.' Journal of British Studies 15 (1975): 46-66. 

Trevor-Roper, H.R. 'Review Essay: Intellectual Origins of the English Revolution by Christopher Hill.' History and Theory 5 (1966): 61-82. 

Weisinger, Herbert. 'The Idea of the Renaissance and the Rise of Science.' Lynchos 7 (1946): 11-35. 

________. 'The English Origins of the Sciological Interpretaion of the Renaissance.' Journal of the History of Ideas 11 (1950): 321-38. 

Whitehead, Alfred N. Science and the Modern World: Lower Lectures. esp. chapts. 1 and 3. 1925. NY: Free, 1967. 

Zilsel, Edgar. 'The Sodiological Roots of Science.' American Journal of Sociology. 47 (1941-42): 544-62. 




Science, Learned Societies & Institutions

Agassi, Joseph. 'The Origins of the Royal Society.' Organon 7 (1970): 117-35. Essay rev. of Purver. 

Artz, F.B. The Development of Technical Education in France, 1500-1850. London: Cambridge UP, 1966. 

Bertrand, Joseph. L'Academie des Sciences et les Academiciens de 166-1793. Paris: 1869. 

Bigourdan, G. Les Premieres Societes savantes de Paris au xviie siecle, Comptes-rendus. 1916-17. Tomes 163,163. Rpt. brochure, 1919. 

Birth, Thomas. The History of the Royal Society. Facs of 1756-7 London ed. Intro. by A.R. and M.B. Hall. NY: Johnson, 1968. 

Brown, Harcourt. Scientific Organizations in 17th-century France, 1620-1680. Baltimore: John Hopkins UP, 1934. 

Castiglioni, Arturo. 'The School of Ferrara and the Controversy on Pliny.' Science, Medicine and History. Vol. 2. Ed. E.A. Underwood. 269-79. London: Oxford UP, 1953. 

Clark, G.N. Science and Social Welfare in the Age of Newton. London: Oxford UP, 1937. 

Cohen, I.B. 'Sir Isaac Newton, Hans Sloane and the Academie Royale des Sciences.' Melanges Alexandre Koyre. Vol. 1. Paris: 1964. 104. 

Cope, Jackson I and H.W. Jones. Introduction. Thomas Sprat's History of the Royal Society. Ed. Thomas Sprat. ix-xxxii. St. Louis: Washington UP, 1959. ix-xxxii. 

Costelljo, William T. The Scholastic Curriculum at Early Seventeenth Century. Cambridge MA, 1958. 

Debus, Allen G. Science and Education in the Seventeenth Century. The Webster-Ward Debate. New York: 1970. 

Drake, Stillman. 'The Accademia dei Lin cei.' 11 Science 11 Mar. 1966: 1194-1200. 

Faure-Fremiet, E. 'Les Origines de l'Acadmie des Sciences de Paris.' Notes & Records of the Roy. Soc. of London. 21 (1966): 20-31. 

Fisch, H. and H.W. Jones. 'Bacon's Influence on Sprat's History of the Royal Society.' Modern Language Quarterly 12 (1951): 399-406. 

Gauja, Pierre. 'L'Academie Royale des Sciences (1666-1793).' Rev. d'Hist. des Sci. Sept.-Dec.(1949): 293-310. 

Gillespie, Charles C. 'Physics and Philosophy: A Study of the Influence of the College of Physicians of London upon the Foundations of the Royal Society.' Journal of Modern History 19 (1947): 210-225. 

Graves, F.P. Peter Ramus and the Eduactional Reformation of the Sixteenth Century. New York, 1912. 

Parker, Irene. Dissenting Academies in England, their rise and progress and their place among the educational systems of the country. London: Cambridge UP, 1914. 

Purver, Margaret. The Royal Society: Concept and Creation. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1967. 

Randall, John. The School of Padua and the Emergence of Modern Science. Padova, 1961. 

Rattansi, Pyarali M. 'The Intellectual Origins of the Royal Society.' Note and Records of the Royal Society 23 (1968): 129-143. 

Simon, Joan. 'The Comenian Educational Reformers 1640-1660 and the Royal Society of London.' Acta Comenia 2 (1970): 165-178. 

Skinner, Quentin. 'Thomas Hobbes and the Nature of the Early Royal Society.' Historical Journal 12 (1969): 217-239. 

Solomon, H.M. Public Welfare, Science, and Propaganda in 17th Century France.

Sprat, Thomas. The History of the Royal Society of London, for the Improving of Natural Knowledge. 4th ed. London, printed for J. Knapton, J. Walthoe. 

Stimson, D. Scientists and Amateurs: A History of the Royal Society. London, 1949. 

Syfret, R. 'Some Early Critics of the Royal Society.' Notes and Records of the Royal Society 8 (1950): 20-64. 

Taton, Rene. Les Origines de l'Academie Royale des Sciences. Paris, 1965. 

Turnbull, G.H. 'Samuel Hartlib's Influence on the Early History of the Royal Society.' Notes and Records 10 (1953): 101-130. 

Webster, Charles. The Great Instauration: Science, Medicine, and Reform, 1626-1660. esp. chap. 6: 'The Puritan World View and the Rise of Modern Science.' London: Duckworth, 1975. 

_______. 'The Origins of the Royal Society.' History of Science 6 (1967): 106-129. Essay rev. of Purver. 

Yates, Frances A. The French Academies of the Sixteenth Century. London: U of London P, 1947. 




Science & Religion

Austin, William H. 'Isaac Newton on Science and Religion.' Journal of the History of Ideas 31 (1970): 521-542. 

Burtt, E. A. 'The Metephysical Foundations of Modern Physical Science: A Historical and Critical Essay.' London. 

Christianson, John R. 'Copernicus and the Lutherans.' Sixteenth Century Journal 4 (1973): 1-10. 

Cohen, I. Bernard. 'Isaac Newton's Principia, the Scriptures, and the Divine Providence.' Philosophy, Science, and Method. Ed. Sidney Morgenbesser. New York: St. Martin's, 1969. 523-548. 

Gerrish, B.A. 'The Reformation and the Rise of Modern Science.' The Impact of the Church Upon its Culture. Ed. Jerald C. Brauer. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1968. 231-265. 

Greaves, R. L. 'Puritanism and Science: The Anatomy of a Controversy.' Journal of the History of Ideas. 30 (1969): 345-68. 

Grendler, Paul F. 'Venice, Science, and the Index of Prohibited Books.' The Nature of Scientific Discovery. Ed. Owen Gingerich. Washington: Smithsonian, 1975. 335-347. 

Guerlac, Henry and M.C. Jacob. 'Bentley, Newton, and Providnece (The Boyle Lectures Once More).' Journal of the History of Ideas 30 (1969): 307-318. 

Hill, Christpopher. 'Puritanism, Capitalism and the Scientific Revolution.' Past and Present 29 (1964): 88-97. 

_______. 'Science, Religion, and Society in the 16th and 17th Centuries.' Past and Present 32 (1965): 110-112. 

Hooykaas, R. 'Calvin and Copernicus.' Organon 10 (1974): 139-148. 

_____. Religion and the Rise of Modern Science. Edingurgh, 1972. 

_____. 'Science and Reformation' J. World History, 1956.The Evolution of Science. Ed. Guy S. Metraus et al. New York: NAL Mentor, 1963. 

_____. 'Science and Religion in the 17th Century: Isaac Beekman (1599-1637).' Free University Quarterly [Amsterdam] 1 (1951): 169-183. 

Jacob, J.R. 'Boyle's Circle in the Protectorate: Revelation, Politics, and the Millenium.' Journal of the History of Ideas 38 (1977): 131-140. 

________. 'Robert Boyle and Subversive Religion in the Early Restoration.' Albion 6 (1974): 275-293. 

_____ and M.C. 'Seventeenth Century Science and Religion: The State of the Argument.' History of Science 14 (1976): 196-207.

Jacob, Margaret C. 'Millenarianism and Science in the Late 17th Century.' Journal of the Histoy of Ideas 37 (1976): 355-342. 

_____. The Newtonians and the English Revolution, 1689-1720. Ithaca: Cornell UP, 1976. 

Kearney, H.F. 'Puritanism, Capitalism, and the Scientific Revolution.' Past and Present 28 (1964): 81-101 

_____. 'Puritanism and Science: Problems of Definition.' Past and Present 31 (1965): 104-110. 
 

Kemsley, Douglas S. 'Relgious Influenced in the Rise of Modern Science: A Review and Criticism, Particularly of the 'Protestant-Puritan Ethic' Theory.' Annals of Science 24 (1968): 199-226. 

Kocher, Paul. Science and Religion in Elizabethan England. 1953. Octagon: 1969. 

Kubrin, David. 'Newton and the Cyclical Cosmos: Providence and the Mechanical Philosophy.' Journal of the History of Ideas 28 (1967): 25-346. 

Langford, Jerome J. Galileo, Science and the Church. Ann Arbor: U of Mich. Press, 1966. 

Manuel, Frank E. The Religion of Isaac Newton: The Fremantle Lectures 1973. Oxford: Clarendon, 1974. 

McGuire, J.E. and P.M. Rattansi. 'Newton and the 'Pipes of Pan.'' Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London 21 (1966): 110-143. 

Mason, Stephen F. 'The Scientific Revolution and the Protestant Reformantion.' Annals of Science. 9 (1953): 64-87 & 154-175. 

______. 'Science and Religion in 17th Century England.' Past and Present. 3 (1953): 28-44. 

Mulligan, Lotte. 'Anglicanism, Latitudinarianism, and Science in 17th Century England.' Annals of Science 30 (1973): 213-219. 

Oakley, Fransis. 'Christian Theology and the Newtonian Science: The Rise of the Concept of the Laws of Nature.' Church History, 1961. Creation: The Impact of as Idea. Ed. Daniel O'Conner et al. NY: 1969. 54-83. 

Pelseneer, Jean. 'L'origine Protestante de la science moderne.' Lynchos (1946-7): 246-248. 

Rabb, Theodore K. 'Puritanism and the Rise of Experimental Science in England.' Journal of World History 7 (1962): 46-67. 

_____. 'Religion and the Rise of Modern Science.' Past and Present 31 (1965): 111-126. 

Rattansi, P.M. 'Science and Religion in the 17th Century.' The Emergence of Science in Western Europe. Ed. M. Crossland. London: Macmillan, 1976. 79-87. 

Rosen, Edward. 'Calvin's Attitude Toward Copernicus.' Journal of the History of Ideas 21 (1960): 431-441. 

Russo, Francois. 'Catholicism, Protestantism, and the Development of Science in the 16th and 17th Centuries.' The Evolution of Science. Ed. Guy S. Metraus, et al. New York: NAL Mentor. 1963. Originally appeared in French in J. World History, 1957. 

Shapiro, Barbara. 'Debate: Science, Politics, and Religion.' Past and Present 66 (1975): 133-38. Afterward by Lotte Mulligan. 

______. Latitudinarianism and Science in 17th-Century England.' Past and Present 40 (1968): 16-41. 

Stauffer, Richard. 'Calvin et Copernic.' Revue de l'History des Religions 179 (1971): 31-40. 

Stimson, Dorothy. Puritanism and the new philosophy in 17th century England. History of Medicine 3 (1935): 321-334. 

Strong, E.W. 'Newton and God.' J. History Ideas 13 (1952): 147-67. 

Thomas, Keith. Religion and the Decline of Magic. New York: 1971. 

Thorner, Isidor. 'Ascetic Protestantism and the Development of Science and Technology.' American Journal of Sociology 58 (1952): 25-33. 

Yates, Frances A. The Rosicrucian Englightenment. London: Routledge and Kegal Paul, 1972. 




SCIENCE & LITERATURE

Baum, Robert. 'The Scientific Affinities of English Baroque Prose.' English Miscellany 13 (1962): 59-80. 

Coffin, Charles M. John Donne and the New Philosophy. 1937. New York: Humanities, 1958. 

Cope, Jackson I. 'Modes of Modernity in 17th Century Prose.' Modern Language Quarterly 31 (1970): 92-111. 

Curry, Walter C. Milton's Ontology, Cosmology, and Physics. Lexington: U of Kentucky P, 1957. 

Harrison, Charles. 'Ancient Atomists and English Literature of the 17th Century.' Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 45 (1934): 1-79. 

Jacobus, Lee A. ''Thaumaturgike' in Paridise Lost.' Huntingto Library Quarterly 33 (1970): 387-393. 

Jones, Richard F. et al. The 17th Century: Studies in the History of English Thought and Literature from Bacon to Pope. Stanford: Stanford UP, 1951. 

Konrvny, Lunomir. 'Young Milton and the Telescope.' Journal of Warburg Inst. 37 (1974): 368-373. 

Lloyd, Claude. 'Shadwell and the Virtuosi.' Publications of the MLA 44 (1929): 472-494. 

McGuire, J.E. and P.M. Rattansi. 'Newton and the Pipes of Pan.' Notes and Records of the Royal Society 21 (1966): 108. 

Mandel, Siegfried. 'From the Mummelsee to the Moon: Refractions of Science in 17th Century Literature.' Comparative Literary Studies 9 (1972): 407-415. 

Maynard, K. 'Science in Early English Literature.' Isis 17 (1972): 94-126. 

Nicolson M. H. 'The Breaking of the Circle. Studies in the Effect of the 'new science' upon Seventeenth Century Poetry.' Rpt. Norman Wait Harris lectures. Evanston: Northwestern UP, 1950. 

_____. Mountain Gloom and Mountain Glory: The Development of the Aesthetics of the Infinite. 1959. New York: Norton, 1963. 

_____. 'Newton Demands the Muse. Newton's Opticks and the Eighteenth Century Poets.' History of Ideas Series. No. 2. Princeton: Princeton UP, 1946. 

_____. Pepys' Diary and the New Science. Charlottsville: UP of Virginia, 1965. 

______. 'Science and Imagination.' Collected Essays on the Telescope and Imagination; Kepler, the Somnium, and John Donne; Milton and the Telescope; the Background to Swift; the Microscope and English Imagination. Ithaca: Cornell, 1965. 

Schuler, Robert. 'English Scientific Poetry, 1500-1700: Prolegomena and Preliminary Check List.' Papers of the Bibliograhpical Society of America 69 (1975): 482-502. 

Shugg, Wallace. 'The Cartesian Beast-Machine in English Literature (1663-1750).' The Journal of the History of Ideas 29 (1968): 279-92. 

Willey, B. The Seventeenth Century Background; Studies in the thought of the age in relation to poetry and religion. London: 1934. 

Williamson, George. The Senecan Amble: Prose form from Bacon to Collier. 1951. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1966. 

Youngren, William H. 'Generality, Science, and Poetic Language in the Restoration.' ELH 35 (1968): 158-187. 




ARTICLES & BOOKS

Adelmann, Howard B. Marcello Malpighi and Evolution of Embryology. 2 Vols. Ithaca: Cornell UP, 1966. 

Agassi, Joseph. 'Leibniz's Place in the History of Physics.' J. History Ideas 30 (1969): 331-44. 

Aiton, E.J. 'The Cartesian Theory of Gravity.' Ann. Science 1q6 (1960): 65-82. 

________. 'The Celestial Mechanics of Leibniz.' Ann. Science 16 (1960): 65-82. 

_____.'The Celestial Mechanics of Leibniz: A New Interpretation.' Ann. Science 20 (1964): iii-23. 

______. 'The Celestial Mechanics of Leibniz in the Light of Newtonian Criticism.' Ann. Science 18 (1962): 31-41. 

_____. 'The Concept of Force.' Rev. of Force in Newton's Physics by R.S. Westfall. History of Science 10 (1971): 88-102. 

_____. 'The Contributions of Newton, Bernoulli and Euler to the Theory of the Tides.' Annals of Science 11 (1955): 206. 

_______. 'Descartes' Theory of the Tides.' Annals of Science 11 (1955): 337. 

_____. 'Galileo and the Theory of the Tides.' Isis 56 (1965): 56. 

_____. 'Galileo's Theory of the Tides.' Annals of Science 18 (1954): 44. 

_____. ' An Imaginary Error in the Celestial Mechanics of Leibniz.' Annals of Science 21 (1965): 169-73. 

______. 'The Inverse problem of Central Forces.' Annals of Science 20 (1964): 81. 

_____. 'Kepler's Second Laws of Planetary Motion.' Isis 60 (1969): 75. 

_____. 'Newton and the Cartesians.' Science Rev. 40 (1959): 406-13. 

______. 'Newton's aether-stream Hypothesis and the Inverse Square Law of Gravitation.' Annals of Science 25 (1969): 255. 

_____. ' On Galileo and the Earth-Moon System.' Isis 54 (1963): 265. 

_____. The Vortex Theory of Planetary Motion. New York: 1970. 

Alexander, H.G. The Leibniz-Clarke Correspondence. Manchester: 1956. 

Allix G. Pascal et le systeme de Copernic. Bulletin de l'Academie Delphinale. XVIII, 1904. 

Armitage, A. 'The Astronomical Work of Nicolas-Louis Lacaille.' Annals of Science 12 (1956): 163. 

______. 'The Deviation of Falling Bodies.' Annals of Science 5 (1947): 343. 

Arons, A. B. and A. M. Bork. 'Newton's Laws of Motion and the 17th Century LAsw of Impact.' Am. J. Phys 32 (1964): 313-17. 

Auger, Leon. Un Savant meconnu: Giles Personne de Roberval (1602- 1675). Paris: 1962. 

Axtell, J. L. 'Locke's review of the Principia.' Notes and Records of the Royal Society 20 (1965): 152. 

Ball, W. W. Rouse. An Essay on Newton's Principa. London, 1893. Rpt. ' A. Newtonian Fragment, relating to Centripetal Forces.' Proc. London Math. Soc. 23 (1892): 226-31. 

Baumgardt, C. Johannes Kepler: Life and Letters. London: 1952.

Beeckman, Isaac. Journal tenu par Isaac Beeckman de 1604-1634, publie avec une introduction et des notes par C. de Waard. 3 Vols. La Haye: 1939,1942,1945. 

Bell, A. E. Christian Huygens. London: 1947. 

Bentham, Muriael A. 'Some Seventeenth Century Views Concerning the Nature of Hear and Cold.' Annals of Science 2 (1937): 431-450. 

Bernier, F. Abrege de la philsophie de Gassendi. Paris: 1675. 

Bertrand, Joseph. Les fondateurs de l'astronomie modern. Copernic- Tycho- Brahe-Kepler-Galilee- Newton. Paris. 

Birkenmajer, Aleksander. Etudes d'histoire des sciences en Pologne (studia Copernicana, IV). Wrataw: 1972. 

Blackwell, R. J. 'Descartes' laws of Motion.' Isis 57 (1966): 220. 

Boas, Marie. 'Boyle as a Theoretical Scientist.' Isis 41 (1950): 261-268. 

_____. 'The Establishment of the Mechanical Philosophy.' Osirir 19 (1952): 412-541. 

_____. Robert Boyle & Seventeenth-Century Chemistry. London: Cambridge UP, 1958. 

_____ and A. Rupert Hall. 'Newton's Mechanical Principles.' Journal of the History of Ideas 20 (1959): 167 -78. 

Bork, ALfred M. 'Logical Structure of the First Three Sections of Newton's Principia.' Am. J. Phys. 35 (1967): 342-4. 

Boutroux, Pierre. 'L'enseignement de la mecanique en France au XVIIIe siecle.' Isis 4 (1921): 276-94. 

Boyer, C.B. The Concept of the Calculus. New York: 1939. 

_____. History of Mathematics. New York: 1968. 

_____. The History of the Calculus and its Concepural Development. New York: 1959. 

_____. 'The Invention of Analytic Geomentry.' The Scientific American Jan. 1949: 40 sqq. 

Boyle, Robert. The Sceptical Chymist. Intro. by M.M. Pattison Muir. London: J. M. Dent & Sons. New York: Dutton. 

_____. The Works of the Honourable Robert Boyle. 6 vols. London: 1772. 

Brahe, Tycho. Tychonis Brahe Dani Opera Omnia. Ed. J.L.E. Dreyer. 15 vols. Hauniae: 1913-29. 

_____. Tycho Brahe's Description of his Insturments and Scientific Work as given in his Astronomiae Instauratae Mechanica. Trans. and ed. Hans Raeder, Elis Stromgren, and Bregt Stromgren. Copenhagen: 1946. 

Brewster, David. Memoirs of the Life, Writings and Discoveries of Sir Isaac Newton. 2 vols. Edinburgh: 1885. 

Brodrick, J. The Life and Work of Blessed Robert Francis, Cardinal Bellarmine, 1542-1621. London: 1928,ii. 

Brunet, P. Les physiciens hollandais et las methode experimentale en France au xviiie siecle. Paris: 1926. 

Burstyn, H.L. 'Gailieo's Attempt to Prove that the Earth Moves.' Isis 53 (1962): 161. 

Burton, Robert. The Anatomy of Melancholy.

Burtt, E. A. The Metaphysical Foundations of Modern Science, Rev. New York: 1932. 

Callot, E. La renaissance des sciences de las vie au XVIe siecle Paris: 1951. 

Carrington, Hereward. 'The Earlier Theories on Gravitation.' The Monist 23 (1913): 445-58. 

Caspar, M. Johannes Kepler. Stuttgart: 1950. 

Cassirer, Ernest. 'Giovanni Pico della Mirandola. A Study in the History of Renaissance Ideas.' JHI III. 123-44 (1942): 319-46. 

Caspar, Max. Kepler. Trans. C. Doris Hellman. London: 1959. 

Charleton, Walter. Physiologia Epicuro-Gassendo-Charltoniana. Ed. Robert H. Kargon. London: 1654. New York: 1966. 

Clagett, Marshall. The Science of Mechanics in the Middle Ages. Madison: U of Wis. P, 1959. 

_____ ed. Critical Problems in the History of Science. Madison: U of Wis. P, 1962. 

Clark, Joseph T. 'Pierre Gassendi and the Physics of Galileo.' Isis 54 (1963): 352-70. 

Clavelin, Maurice. La philosophie naturelle de Galilee. Paris: 1968. 

Cohen, I. B. 'Dynamics, the key to the new science of the seventeenth century.' Acta historiae rerum naturlaium necnon technicarum. Special Issue No. 3. Prague (1967): 79. See also Special Issue No. 4, Prague (1968). 

_____. 'The French translation of Isaac Newton's Philosophiae naturalis principia mathematica.' Archives Internationales d'histoire des sciences 17 (1962): 261. 

_____. 'Leibniz on elliptical orbits.' Journal of History of Medicine 17 (1962): 72. 

_____. 'Newton and the Leibniz-Clarke Correspondence.' Archs. int. Hist. Science. 15 (1962): 52-126. 

_____. 'Newton's Attribution of the First two Laws of Motion to Galileo.' Gruppa Italiana di Storia Scienza, Firenze-Pisa (1964). 

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________. 'Quantum in se est.' Proceedings of the American Catholic Philoshophical Association (1964): 41. Notes and Records of the Royal Society 10 (1964): 131. 

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Copernicus, Nicholaus. 'On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres.' Trans. C. G. Wallis. Great Books of the Western World. Vol. 16. Chicago: 1952. 

Costabel, P. 'Essai critique sur quelques concepts de las mecanique cartesienne.' Archives internationales d'histoire des sciences 20 (1967): 235. 

_____. Leibniz and Dynamics. London: 1974. 

_______. et al., L'Oeuvre Scientifique de Pascal. 

Crombie, A. C. Robert Grosseteste and the Origins of Experimental Science, 1100-1700. London: Oxford UP, 1953. 

______. Scientific Change. London: 1974. 

Debus, Allen G. The Chemical Dream of the Renaissance. Cambridge: 1968. 

________. The English Paracelsians. London: 1965. 

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________. 'Mathematics and Nature in the Chemical Texts of the Renaissance.' Ambix 15 (1968): 3-28. 

_________. The Science and Education in the Seventeenth Century: The Webster-Ward Debate. New York: 1970. 

_________. Science, Medicine and Society in the Renaissance: Essays to Honor Walter Pagel. 2 vols. New York: 1972. 

_________. 'Solution Analysis prior to Robert Boyle.' Chymia 8 (1962): 41-61. 

_____ and Robert Multhauf. Alchemy and Chemistry in the Seventeenth Century. Los Angeles: 1966. 

Delorme, S. et al. Fontenelle: sa vie et son oeuvre. Paris: 1961. 

de Santillana, Giorgio. The Crime of Galileo. Chicago: 1955. 

Descartes, Rene. Discourse on Method, Optics, Geometry, and Meterology. trans. Paul J. Olscamp. Indianapolis: 1965. 

_________. OEures de Descartes, puliees par Charles Adam et Paul Tannery. 12 vols. Paris: 1897-1913. 

__________. Treatise of Man. Ed. and trans. Thomas S. Hall. Cambridge, MA: 1972. 

Dijksterhuis, E. J. 'Christian Huygens.' Centaurus 2 (1951-3): 265-82. 

________. The Mechanization of the World Picture. Trans. C. Dikshoorn. Oxford: 1961. 

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Drake, Stillman, ed. Discoveries and Opinions of Galileo. Garden City, NY: 1957. 

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_____. Galileo Studies. Ann Arbor: U of Mich. P, 1970. 

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Dreyer, J. L. E. A History of Astronomy from Thales to Kepler.

_____. Tycho Brahe, rev. ed. New York: 1953. 

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`Edpinasse, Margaret. Robert Hooke.

Fermat, Pieere de. Oeuvres de Fermat, ed. Tannery et Ch. Henry. 4 vols. Paris: 1891-1912. 

Feur, Lewis. The Scientific Intellectual. New York: 1963. 

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Gagnebin, B. 'De la cause de la pesanteur: memoire de Nicolas Fatio de Du illier.' Notes and Records of the Royal Society 6 (1949): 105. 

_____. Galilee: Aspects de sa vie et do son oeuvre (Centre International de Synthese). Paris: 1968. 

Galilei, Galileo. Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems. Trans. Stillman Drake. 2nd. ed. Berkeley: 1967. 

_______. Discourse on Bodies in Water.

_________. On Motion and On Mechanics. Trans. I.E. Dabkin and Stillman Drake. Wisconson: 1960. 

__________. 'Le opere di Galilei.' Edizione nazionale. 20 vols. Florence: 1890-1909. 

__________. Two New Sciences. Trans. Stillman Drake. Madison: 1974. 

Garin, Eugenio. Science and Civic Life in the Italian Renaissance. Garden City, NY: 1966. 

Gassendi, Pierre. The Selected Works of Pierre Gassendi. Tran. Craig B. Brush. New York: 1972 

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Gilbert, Neal Ward. Renaissance Concepts of Method. New York: 1960. 

Gilbert, William. De magnete. Trans. Fleury Mottelay. New York: 1893. 

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Hall, A. Rupert. Ballistics in the Seventeenth Century: A Study in the Relations of Science and Was with Reference Principally to England. Cambridge: 1952. 

________. 'Cartesian dynamics.' Archive for History of Exact Sciences 1 (1961): 172. 

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________. 'Newton on the Calculation of Central Forces.' Annals of Science 13 (1957): 62-71. 

_______. 'Sir Isaac Newton's note-book, 1661-1665. Cambridge Hist. Journal 9 (1948): 239-250. 

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_____ and M. B. 'The Date of 'On Motion in Ellipse.'' Ach. Int. Hist. Sci. 16 (1963): 23-8. 

________ and Marie Boas Hall. Unpublished Scientific Papers of Issac Newton. Cambridge: 1962. 

Hall, Marie Boas, Ed. Nature and Nature's Laws: Documents of the Scientific Revolution. New York: 1970. 

_____. Robert Boyle on Natural Philosophy. Cambridge: 1958. 

Hall, Thomas S. Ideas of Life and Matter. 2 vols. Chicago: 1969. 

Halley, Edmond. Correspondence and papers of Edmond Halley. Preceded by an unpublished memoir of his life by on of his contemporaries and the 'eloge' by D'Ortous de Mairan. Arranged and Edited by Eugene Fairfield MacPike. Oxford: Claredon Press, 1932. 

Harrison, Charles T. 'Bacon, Hobbes and the ancient atomists.' Harvard Studies and Notes in Philology and Literature 15 (1933): 191-218. 

Harvey, William. On the Motion of the Heart and Blood in Animals. Ed. Alex Bowie. Chicago: 1962. 

Haydn, Hiram. The Counter-Renaissance. New York: 1950. 

Herivel, John. The Background to Newton's Principia. Oxford: 1965. 

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_________. 'Newton's Test of the Inverse Square Law Against the Moon's Motion.' Arch Int. Hist. Sci. 14 (1961): 93-7. 

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Hugher, B. Regiomontanus on Traingles

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Ihde, A.J. The Development of Modern Chemistry

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Johnson, Francis R. Astronomical Thought in Renaissance England. Baltimore: 1937. 

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_________. 'Thomas Digges, the Copernican System, and the idea of the Infinity of the Universe in 1576.' Huntington Library Bulletin V (1934): 69 sqq. 

Jones, Richard F. Ancients and Moderns. 2nd. ed. St. Louis: 1961. 

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Jourdain. 'Newton's Theorems on the Attraction of Spheres.' The Monist 30 (1920): 199-202.

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Kargon, Robert H. Atomism in England from Hariot to Newton. Oxford: 1966. 

Kepler, Johannes. Opera Omnia. Ed. Charles Frisch. 8 vols. Frankfurt: 1858-71. 

__________. Gesammelte Werke, heraugeg. von Walter von Dyck und Max Casper. I-IV, VI. Munich: 1937-41. 

__________. Neue Astronomie, Ubers. und eingel. von Max Caspar. Munich-Berlin: 1929. 

_____. Das Weltgeheimnis (Mysterium Cosmographicum), Ubers. und eingel. von Max Caspar. Munich-Berlin: 1936. 

Kline, Morris. Mathematical Thought from Ancient to Modern Times.

Koestler, Arthur. The Watershed: A Biography of Johannes Kepler. Garden City, NY: 1960. 

Koyre, Alexandre. The Astronomical Revolution. Trans. R.E.W. Maddison. London: 1973. 

_____. Discovering Plato. Trans. Leonora Cohen Rosenfield. New York: Columbia UP, 1954. 

_____. A Documentary History of the Problem of Fall from Kepler to Newton. Philadelphia: 1955. 

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_____. Etudes Galileennes. Paris: 1939. 

______. From the Closed World to the Infinite Universe. Baltimore: 1957. 

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_____. 'La gravitation universelle de Kepler a Newton.' Archives internationales d'histoire des sciences 4 (1951): 638. 

______. 'La mecanique celeste de J.A. Borelli.' Rev. His. Sci. 5 (1952): 101-38. 

_____. Metaphysics and Measurement: Essays in the Scientific Revolution. London: 1968. 

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_____ and I. B. Cohen. 'Newton's Electrical and Elastic Spirit.' Isis 51 (1960): 337. 

Kristeller, Paul O. Eight Philosophers of the Italian Renaissance. Stanford: 1964. 

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Kuhn, Thomas S. The Copernican Revolution. Cambridge, MA: 1957. 

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______. 'Newton's '31st query' and the degradation of Gold.' Isis 42 (1951): 296-298. 

_____. 'Robert Boyle and Structural Chemistry in the Seventeenth Century.' Isis 43 (1952): 12-36. 

____. The Structure of Scientific Revolution. Chicago: 1962. 

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McGuire, J. E. Body and Void and Newton's De Mundi

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McLean, Antonia. Humanism and the Rise of Science in Tudor England. New York: 1972. 

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Nauert, Charles G. Agrippa and the Crisis of Renaissance Thought. Urbana: 1965. 

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O'Malley, Charles D. Andreas Vesalius of Brussels. Berkeley: 1964.

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Pascal, Blaise. Pensees et opuscules. Ed. L. Brunschvicg. Paris. 

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Raven, Charles E. English Naturalists from Neckam to Ray. Cambridge: 1947. 

Ravetz, Jerome R. Astronomy and Cosmology in the Achievement of Nicolaus Copernicus. Wrocaw: 1965. 

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Whitteridge, Gweneth. William Harvey and the Circulation of the Blood. London: 1971. 

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______. The Rosicrucian Enlightenment. London: 1972.



 

 
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