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Mathematical Practitioners and the Transformation of Natural Knowledge in Early Modern Europe

✍ Scribed by Lesley B. Cormack, Steven A. Walton, John A. Schuster (eds.)


Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Year
2017
Tongue
English
Leaves
205
Series
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science 45
Edition
1
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


This book argues that we can only understand transformations of nature studies in the Scientific Revolution if we take seriously the interaction between practitioners (those who know by doing) and scholars (those who know by thinking). These are not in opposition, however. Theory and practice are end points on a continuum, with some participants interested only in the practical, others only in the theoretical, and most in the murky intellectual and material world in between. It is this borderland where influence, appropriation, and collaboration have the potential to lead to new methods, new subjects of enquiry, and new social structures of natural philosophy and science.

The case for connection between theory and practice can be most persuasively drawn in the area of mathematics, which is the focus of this book. Practical mathematics was a growing field in early modern Europe and these essays are organised into three parts which contribute to the debate about the role of mathematical practice in the Scientific Revolution. First, they demonstrate the variability of the identity of practical mathematicians, and of the practices involved in their activities in early modern Europe. Second, readers are invited to consider what practical mathematics looked like and that although practical mathematical knowledge was transmitted and circulated in a wide variety of ways, participants were able to recognize them all as practical mathematics. Third, the authors show how differences and nuances in practical mathematics typically depended on the different contexts in which it was practiced: social, cultural, political, and economic particularities matter. Historians of science, especially those interested in the Scientific Revolution period and the history of mathematics will find this book and its ground-breaking approach of particular interest.



✦ Table of Contents


Front Matter....Pages i-xii
Introduction: Practical Mathematics, Practical Mathematicians, and the Case for Transforming the Study of Nature....Pages 1-8
Front Matter....Pages 9-9
Handwork and Brainwork: Beyond the Zilsel Thesis....Pages 11-35
Consuming and Appropriating Practical Mathematics and the Mixed Mathematical Fields, or Being β€œInfluenced” by Them: The Case of the Young Descartes....Pages 37-65
Front Matter....Pages 67-67
Mathematics for Sale: Mathematical Practitioners, Instrument Makers, and Communities of Scholars in Sixteenth-Century London....Pages 69-85
Technologies of Pow(d)er: Military Mathematical Practitioners’ Strategies and Self-Presentation....Pages 87-113
Machines as Mathematical Instruments....Pages 115-127
Front Matter....Pages 129-129
The Making of Practical Optics: Mathematical Practitioners’ Appropriation of Optical Knowledge Between Theory and Practice....Pages 131-148
Hero of Alexandria and Renaissance Mechanics....Pages 149-165
Duytsche Mathematique and the Building of a New Society: Pursuits of Mathematics in the Seventeenth-Century Dutch Republic....Pages 167-181
Back Matter....Pages 183-203

✦ Subjects


History of Science;History and Philosophical Foundations of Physics;History of Mathematical Sciences;History of Early Modern Europe


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