Galileo's logical treatises
a translation, with notes and commentary, of his appropriated Latin questions on Aristotle's Posterior analytics
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Author
Contributions
- Wallace, William A. - Contributor
- Galilei, Galileo, 1564-1642. - Contributor
Publication
1992 - Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht
Language
English
Word Count
59,750 words, Guess
Page Count
239 pages
Identifiers
- Open LibraryOL1556478M
- ISBN-100792315782
- OCLC Control Number25165460
- OCLC Control Number25026938
- Library of Congress Control Number91036925
and 1 more
- Goodreads1090816
Classifications
- DDC001/.01 s
- LCCQ174 .B67 vol. 138
Description
"The problem of Galileo's logical methodology has long interested scholars. In this volume William A. Wallace offers a solution that is completely unexpected, yet backed by convincing documentary evidence. His analysis starts with an early notebook Galileo wrote at Pisa, appropriating a Jesuit professor's exposition of the Posterior Analytics of Aristotle, and ends with one of the last letters Galileo wrote, stating that in logic he has been a Peripatetic all his life. Wallace's detective work unearths the complete logic course from which the notebook was excerpted, then proceeds to show how its terminology and methodology continue to surface in Galileo's later writings in which he founds his new sciences of the heavens and of local motion. The result is a tour de force that commends itself not only to Galileo scholars and to logicians, philosophers, and historians, but to anyone interested in the epistemic roots of modern science."--BOOK JACKET.
Subjects
Topics
Times
Series Statement
- Boston studies in the philosophy of science ;
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