A Source of Book in Geology

A Source of Book in Geology
Author: Kirtley Fletcher Mather
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1964
Genre: Geology
ISBN:


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A Source Book in Medieval Science

A Source Book in Medieval Science
Author: Edward Grant
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Total Pages: 890
Release: 1974
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780674823600


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This Source Book explores a millennium of European scientific thought accompanied by critical commentary and annotation; nearly half the selections appear for the first time in the vernacular. Representing "science" in the medieval sense, selections include alchemy, astrology, logic, and theology as well as mathematics, physics, and biology.

A Source Book in Geography

A Source Book in Geography
Author: George Kish
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Total Pages: 482
Release: 1978
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780674822702


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Presents geographical writings, chronologically arranged, with a wealth of material from non-Western sources. Each section is introduced by the editor.

The Meaning of Fossils

The Meaning of Fossils
Author: Martin J.S. Rudwick
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Total Pages: 304
Release: 2008-07-15
Genre: Nature
ISBN: 022614898X


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"It is not often that a work can literally rewrite a person's view of a subject. And this is exactly what Rudwick's book should do for many paleontologists' view of the history of their own field."—Stephen J. Gould, Paleobotany and Palynology "Rudwick has not merely written the first book-length history of palaeontology in the English language; he has written a very intelligent one. . . . His accounts of sources are rounded and organic: he treats the structure of arguments as Cuvier handled fossil bones."—Roy S. Porter, History of Science

The New Science of Geology

The New Science of Geology
Author: Martin J.S. Rudwick
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 337
Release: 2023-04-14
Genre: History
ISBN: 100094168X


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The science of geology was constructed in the decades around 1800 from earlier practices that had been significantly different in their cognitive goals. In the studies collected here Martin Rudwick traces how it came to be recognised as a new kind of natural science, because it was constituted around the idea that the natural world had its own history. The earth had to be understood not only in relation to unchanging natural laws that could be observed in action in the present, but also in terms of a pre-human past that could be reliably known, even if not directly observable and its traces only fragmentarily preserved. In contrast to this radically novel sense of nature's own contingent history, the earth's unimaginably vast timescale was already taken for granted by many naturalists (though not yet by the wider public), and the concurrent development of biblical scholarship precluded any significant sense of conflict with religious tradition. A companion volume, Lyell and Darwin, Geologists: Studies in the Earth Sciences in the Age of Reform, was published in 2005.