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  1. “Being the World Eternal …”: The Age of the Earth in Renaissance Italy.Ivano Dal Prete - 2014 - Isis 105 (2):292-317.
    Scholarship on the early modern period assumes that the Creation story of Genesis and its chronology were the only narratives openly available in Renaissance Europe. This essay revisits the topic by exploring a wide range of literature on the age and nature of the Earth in early modern Italy. It suggests that, contrary to received notions, in the early 1500s an Aristotelian ancient world characterized by slow geological change was a common assumption in discourse on the Earth. These notions were (...)
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  • Jesuit Science After Galileo: The Cosmology of Gabriele Beati.Kerry V. Magruder - 2009 - Centaurus 51 (3):189-212.
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  • Thinking the Earth with the Body: How the Anatomist Nicolaus Steno (1638–1686) Read History in the Earth’s Strata.Nuno Castel-Branco - 2024 - Isis 115 (2):312-334.
    Nicolaus Steno (1638–1686) claimed that the Earth has a history that can be known by analyzing mountain strata with rules today known as Steno’s Principles of Stratigraphy. This essay argues that Steno’s research on the Earth was intrinsically related to his studies of the body. Most accounts associate Steno’s research on fossils with his dissection of a shark in the fall of 1666 in Medici Florence. Instead, the author suggests that Steno turned to the Earth after reading a manuscript about (...)
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