Planets, Stars, and Orbs
The Medieval Cosmos, 1200–1687
Out of Print
- Author: Edward Grant, Indiana University, Bloomington
- Date Published: November 1996
- availability: Unavailable - out of print January 2002
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9780521565097
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Medieval cosmology was a fusion of pagan Greek ideas and biblical descriptions of the world, especially the creation account in Genesis. Because cosmology was based on discussions of the relevant works of Aristotle, primary responsibility for its study fell to scholastic theologians and natural philosophers in the universities of western Europe from the thirteenth to the seventeenth century. Edward Grant describes the extraordinary range of themes, ideas, and arguments that constituted scholastic cosmology for approximately five hundred years, from around 1200 to 1700. Primary emphasis is placed on the world as a whole, what might lie beyond it, and the celestial region, which extended from the Moon to the outermost convex surface of the cosmos. Another important aspect of this study is how natural philosophers in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries responded to the new interpretations of a heliocentric instead of a geoheliocentric Aristotelian cosmology.
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×Product details
- Date Published: November 1996
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9780521565097
- length: 842 pages
- dimensions: 234 x 156 x 38 mm
- weight: 1.305kg
- contains: 14 b/w illus.
- availability: Unavailable - out of print January 2002
Table of Contents
Illustrations
Preface
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Introduction: scope, sources, and social context
1. Pierre Duhem, Medieval cosmology and the scope of the present day
2. The sources of cosmology in the late Middle Ages
3. The social and institutional matrix of scholastic cosmology
Part I. The Cosmos as a Whole and What, if Anything, Lies Beyond:
4. Is the world eternal, without beginning or end?
5. The creation of the world
6. The finitude, shape, and place of the world
7. The perfection of the world
8. The possibility of other worlds
9. Extracosmic void space
Part II. The Celestial Region:
10. The incorruptibility of the celestial region
11. Celestial perfection
12. On celestial matter: can it exist in a changeless state?
13. The mobile celestial orbs: concentrics, eccentrics, and epicycles
14. Are the heavens composed of hard orbs or a fluid substance?
15. The immobile orb of the cosmos: the empyrean heaven
16. Celestial light
17. The properties and qualities of celestial bodies, and the dimensions of the world
18. On celestial motions and their causes
19. The influence of the celestial region on the terrestrial
20. The earth and its cosmic relations: size, centrality, shape, and immobility
Conclusion: Five centuries of scholastic cosmology
Appendices
Bibliography
Index.
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