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  1. John Dee on geometry: Texts, teaching and the Euclidean tradition.Stephen Johnston - 2012 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 43 (3):470-479.
    John Dee’s mathematical interests have principally been studied through his Mathematicall praeface to Henry Billingsley’s 1570 translation of Euclid’s Elements. The focus here is broadened to include the notes he added to Books X–XIII of the Elements. I argue that this additional material drew on a manuscript text, the Tyrocinium mathematicum, that Dee wrote a decade earlier, probably as tutor to the youthful Thomas Digges. Using new evidence for this now-lost work, as well as his notes on Euclid, makes it (...)
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  • Humanists Hate Math: Certainty, Dubitability, and Tradition in Descartes’s Rules.Abram Kaplan - 2024 - Isis 115 (1):23-45.
    Descartes’s arguments about the certainty of mathematics in the Rules for the Direction of the Mind cannot be understood independently of his attack on the authority of ancient authors. The author maintains this view by reading Descartes’s claims about mathematics through the lens of status theory, a framework for disputation revived by Renaissance dialecticians. Within status theory, “certainty” was closely associated with consensus. The essay shows how Descartes used status to attack the authority of the ancient authors and elevate mathematics (...)
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  • Adriaan van Roomen y la uranografía: el enlace de las disciplinas matemáticas y de la filosofía en los siglos XVI y XVII.Zaqueu Vieira Oliveira - 2018 - Metatheoria – Revista de Filosofía E Historia de la Ciencia 9:13--28.
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