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  1. Philosophia Naturalis.[author unknown] - 1991 - Philosophia Naturalis 28:116-116.
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  • Scientific Studies in the English Universities of the Seventeenth Century.Phyllis Allen - 1949 - Journal of the History of Ideas 10 (2):219.
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  • Kepler's Laws of Planetary Motion: 1609–1666.J. L. Russell - 1964 - British Journal for the History of Science 2 (1):1-24.
    Historians of seventeenth-century science have frequently asserted that Kepler's laws of planetary motion were largely ignored between the time of their first publication and the publication of Newton's Principia . In fact, however, they were more widely known and accepted than has been generally recognized.Kepler's ideas were, indeed, rather slow in establishing themselves, and until about 1630 there are few references to them in the literature of the time. But from then onwards, interest in them increased fairly rapidly. In particular, (...)
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  • Hooke and the Law of Universal Gravitation: A Reappraisal af a Reappraisal.Richard S. Westfall - 1967 - British Journal for the History of Science 3 (3):245-261.
    From the very day in 1686 when Edmond Halley placed Book I of the Principia before the Royal Society, Robert Hooke's claim to prior discovery has been associated with the law of universal gravitation. If the seventeenth century rejected Hooke's claim summarily, historians of science have not forgotten it, and a steady stream of articles continues the discussion. In our own day particularly, when some of the glitter has worn off, not from the scientific achievement, but from the character of (...)
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