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  1. Astronomical use of pinhole images in William of Saint-Cloud's Almanach Planetarum.J. L. Mancha - 1992 - Archive for History of Exact Sciences 43 (4):275-298.
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  • Levi ben Gerson's Theory of Planetary Distances.Bernard R. Goldstein - 1986 - Centaurus 29 (4):272-313.
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  • The physical astronomy of Levi ben Gerson.Bernard R. Goldstein - 1997 - Perspectives on Science 5 (1):1-30.
    Levi ben Gerson was a medieval astronomer who responded in an unusual way to the Ptolemaic tradition. He significantly modified Ptolemy’s lunar and planetary theories, in part by appealing to physical reasoning. Moreover, he depended on his own observations, with instruments he invented, rather than on observations he found in literary sources. As a result of his close attention to the variation in apparent planetary sizes, a subject entirely absent from the Almagest, he discovered a new phenomenon of Mars and (...)
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  • Heuristic reasoning: Approximation Procedures in Levi ben Gersons Astronomy.J. L. Mancha - 1998 - Archive for History of Exact Sciences 52 (1):13-50.
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  • Studies on Gersonides: A Fourteenth-Century Jewish Philosopher-Scientist.G. Freudenthal & A. G. Molland - 1995 - Annals of Science 52 (4):417-417.
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  • Levi ben Gerson's Lunar Model.Bernard R. Goldstein - 1972 - Centaurus 16 (4):257-284.
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  • Levi ben Gerson's Preliminary Lunar Model.Bernard R. Goldstein - 1974 - Centaurus 18 (4):275-288.
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  • The Logic of Gersonides: A Translation of Sefer Ha-Heqqesh Ha-Yashar (the Book of the Correct Syllogism) of Rabbi Levi Ben Gershom with Introduction, Commentary, and Analytical Glossary.Charles Harry Manekin (ed.) - 1991 - Dordrecht, Netherland: Springer.
    In the great libraries of Europe and the United States, hidden in fading manuscripts on forgotten shelves, lie the works of medieval Hebrew logic. From the end of the twelfth century through the Renaissance, Jews wrote and translated commentaries and original compositions in Aristotelian logic. One can say without exaggeration that wherever Jews studied philosophy - Spain, France, Northern Africa, Germany, Palestine - they began their studies with logic. Yet with few exceptions, the manuscripts that were catalogued in the last (...)
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