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  1. Aristotelianism in the renaissance.Heinrich Kuhn - 2008 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
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  • “Trust No One But Yourself”: William Gilbert’s Use of Experiment and Rejection of Authority, Reconsidered.Johanna Luggin - 2022 - Perspectives on Science 30 (6):925-949.
    One of the most important components of early modern science was the experiment. Advocates of the “new sciences” used experiments as indisputable evidence in controversies with their opponents and as powerful arguments against authoritative texts. Among the first early modern scientific works to systematically and successfully use experiments as parts of the central argumentation is William Gilbert’s treatise De magnete (1600), in which the author sought to present a completely new theory of magnetism as an explanation of phenomena on earth (...)
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  • Discussing Tides Before and After Newton: Roger Joseph Boscovich’s De aestu maris.Ovanes Akopyan - 2022 - Perspectives on Science 30 (6):1042-1064.
    The causes of tidal motions were widely debated from antiquity up to the eighteenth century. These discussions got a second wind in the early modern period, in the wake of a growing number of cosmological alternatives that challenged the dominant Aristotelian-Ptolemaic stance. The 1687 publication of Isaac Newton’s Principia Mathematica was a defining moment in the discussions and consequently made universal gravitation the most credible and generally accepted explanation. This paper investigates the aftermath of Newton’s discovery and demonstrates how his (...)
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