Galileo Engineer: Art and Modern Science

Science in Context 14 (s1):11-27 (2001)
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Abstract

in spite of koyré's conclusions, there are sufficient reasons to claim that galileo, and with him the beginnings of classical mechanics in early modern times, was closely related to practical mechanics. it is, however, not completely clear how, and to what extent, practitioners and engineers could have had a part in shaping the modern sciences. by comparing the beginnings of modern dynamics with the beginnings of statics in antiquity, and in particular with archimedes — whose rediscovery in the sixteenth century was of great consequence — i will focus on the question of which devices played a comparable role in dynamics to that of the lever and balance in statics. i will also examine where these devices came from. in this way, i will show that the entire world of mechanics of that time — “high” and “low,” practical and theoretical — was of significance for shaping classical mechanics and that a specific relationship between art and science was and is constitutive for modern sciences.

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References found in this work

Medieval Technology and Social Change.L. Carrington Goodrich & Lynn White - 1963 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 83 (3):384.
Galileo and Plato.Alexandre Koyre - 1994 - Neusis 1 (1/4):51-83.
The Scientific Revolution. A Historiographical Inquiry.H. Floris Cohen & Mikulas Teich - 1996 - History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 18 (1):135.

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