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How Boyle became a scientist

History of Science 33 (99):59-103 (1995)

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  1. Infinity and creation: the origin of the controversy between Thomas Hobbes and the Savilian professors Seth Ward and John Wallis.Siegmund Probst - 1993 - British Journal for the History of Science 26 (3):271-279.
    Until recently, historians of mathematics usually agreed in refusing to consider the numerous geometrical publications of Thomas Hobbes as a contribution to the development of mathematics in the seventeenth century. From time to time, one could find statements that although Hobbes did not find new theorems he undoubtedly had profound insights into the logical foundations of mathematics, but these occasional remarks did not encourage historians to go deeper into Hobbes's mathematical thought. In the end, the general conclusion was that Hobbes's (...)
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  • Style and Thought of the Early Boyle: Discovery of the 1648 Manuscript of Seraphic Love.Lawrence Principe - 1994 - Isis 85:247-260.
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  • Style and Thought of the Early Boyle: Discovery of the 1648 Manuscript of Seraphic Love.Lawrence M. Principe - 1994 - Isis 85 (2):247-260.
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  • The History of Scepticism from Erasmus to Spinoza.Richard Henry Popkin - 2023 - Univ of California Press.
    "I had read the book before in the shorter Harper Torchbook edition but read it again right through--and found it as interesting and exciting as before. I regard it as one of the seminal books in the history of ideas. Based on a prodigious amount of original research, it demonstrated conclusively and in fascinating details how the transmission of ancient skepticism was a bital factor in the formation of modern thought. The story is rich in implications for th history of (...)
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  • The ‘Beame of Diuinity’: Animal suffering in the Early Thought of Robert Boyle.Malcolm R. Oster - 1989 - British Journal for the History of Science 22 (2):151-180.
    It has long been recognized that unnecessary cruelty to animals was held to be morally wrong by many classical moralists and medieval scholastics, and was echoed repeatedly in the early-modern period, though not necessarily reflecting any particular concern for animals, but rather to indicate the supposed brutalizing effects on the human character. The prevalence of the more radical view that cruelty to animals was wrong regardless of human consequences has only been dealt with comparatively recently, in the pioneering work of (...)
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  • Gassendi the Atomist: Advocate of History in an Age of Science.Stephen Menn & Lynn Sumida Joy - 1991 - Philosophical Review 100 (2):326.
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  • The earliest published writing of Robert Boyle.Margaret E. Rowbottom - 1950 - Annals of Science 6 (4):376-389.
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  • Personal development and intellectual biography: the case of Robert Boyle.Steven Shapin - 1993 - British Journal for the History of Science 26 (3):335-345.
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