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Galileo in France

French Reactions to the Theories and Trial of Galileo

by John Lewis (Author)
©2006 Monographs XX, 278 Pages

Summary

Galileo’s astronomical and mechanical theories, and his subsequent trial for heresy, profoundly impacted the development of European science, philosophy, and theology, especially in seventeenth-century France, where it shaped the thought of some of its most important writers. France’s long tradition of Gallican independence from Rome allowed Copernican and Galilean ideas to be discussed and promoted more freely than elsewhere. Placing those ideas in a national context, this book’s individual chapters are devoted to tracing their development in the writings of Mersenne, Gassendi, Peiresc, and Descartes; similarly, resistance to Galilean ideas is traced through the writings of Froidmont, Morin, and the work of Cassini at the recently established Observatoire de Paris.

Details

Pages
XX, 278
Year
2006
ISBN (Hardcover)
9780820457680
Language
English
Keywords
Galilei, Galileo Rezeption Frankreich Geschichte 1600-1700
Published
New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, Oxford, Wien, 2006. XX, 278 pp., 3 fig.

Biographical notes

John Lewis (Author)

The Author: John Lewis is Senior Lecturer in French Studies at The Queen’s University, Belfast. He received his undergraduate and postgraduate studies from University College London, completing a Ph.D. on Para-Rabelaisian literature under the supervision of M. A. Screech. He has published widely in the field of French Renaissance literature, particularly on Rabelais and Ronsard, and is the author of Adrien Turnèbe: A Humanist Observed (1998).

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Title: Galileo in France