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Green Lion Press: Current Book List Green Lion Press: Current Book List Home Selected Book List About Green Alphabetical by Title Lion Press This page lists books by title in alphabetical order. If you know the Currently Available title of a book, scroll through to locate it. (If you know the author or By Title are looking for books in a specific category, use one of the other links on the left.) By Author For more information about a specific book, including price and By ordering information, click that book's cover or title. Category Green Cat Modules The Almagest: Introduction to the Mathematics of the Heavens In Production Future by Claudius Ptolemy translated by Bruce M. Perry Ordering edited with notes by William H. Donahue Information A new translation of selections of Ptolemy's Contact Us Almagest for a Ptolemy reader. The book includes notes to assist a nonspecialist readership. Links Designed as a text for use in courses, it contains extensive introductions to the celestial phenomena and to Ptolemy's world system, as well as preliminaries to the individual books of the Almagest. The selection includes Ptolemy's presentation of the form of the universe, the mathematical tools necessary to construct planetary theories, and the theories of the sun, Venus, Mars, together with an account of retrograde motion and the procedure for computing planetary positions for any date. This selection constitutes a lucid introduction to Ptolemy's extraordinarily powerful constructions and his amazingly sophisticated mathematical methods. https://www.greenlion.com/books.html[12/18/20, 12:29:20 PM] Green Lion Press: Current Book List Astronomia Nova by Johannes Kepler translated by William H. Donahue Second edition, completely revised, of the only English translation of Kepler's entire 1609 masterpiece. A work of astonishing originality, Astronomia Nova stands, with Copernicus's De Revolutionibus and Newton's Principia, as one of the founding texts of the scientific revolution. Kepler revolutionized astronomy by insisting that it be based upon physics rather than ideal geometrical models. Includes many new features, including a comprehensive index. The Bones A handy where-to-find-it pocket reference companion to Euclid's Elements, this has all of Euclid's propositions and diagrams without the proofs. Conics: Books I-IV by Apollonius of Perga Books I-III translated by R. Catesby Taliaferro Book IV translated by Michael N. Fried Diagrams by William H. Donahue A combined edition of Conics Books I-III and Conics Book IV, previously available only as separate volumes. This is the only available English translation of the Greek text for these four books. https://www.greenlion.com/books.html[12/18/20, 12:29:20 PM] Green Lion Press: Current Book List Euclid's Elements We have taken the classic Heath translation, given it a completely new layout with plenty of space and generous margins, and published it in an affordable but sturdy student edition in one volume, with minimal notes. Euclid's Elements Book One with Questions for Discussion Edited with Questions for Discussion by Dana Densmore A Green Cat Book The opening book of Euclid's classic, for study of Euclid in the context of the humanities. Maxwell's Mathematical Rhetoric: Rethinking the Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism by Thomas K. Simpson Green Lion Press is delighted to issue as a fine volume Simpson's classic work, which has been circulating underground for decades as photocopied typescript. It is the first major study of Maxwell's Treatise to take seriously the way Maxwell's presents his arguments. This is the original full treatment, to which Simpson's Figures of Thought provides an enticing introduction. https://www.greenlion.com/books.html[12/18/20, 12:29:20 PM] Green Lion Press: Current Book List Maxwell's Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism: the Central Argument by Howard J. Fisher Maxwell's Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism brought about what Einstein called "the greatest change in the axiomatic basis of physics since Newton." But Maxwell's aim was never to construct an axiomatic theory. Instead, the Treatise presents an argument which, beginning with the most characteristic electrical and magnetic phenomena, and interpreting them as manifestations of continuous fields of electric and magnetic energy, culminates in Maxwell's theory of light as a wave motion within those fields. The argument of the Treatise is not straightforwardly demonstrative but is a dialectical one that can be challenging to discern among the many topics presented. This book undertakes to extract and expound the principal path of Maxwell's dialectical thinking. Mechanics from Aristotle to Einstein by Michael J. Crowe Notre Dame professor Michael Crowe follows up his deservedly popular Theories of the World from Antiquity to the Copernican Revolution and Modern Theories of the Universe from Herschel to Hubble with a guided sourcebook on motion and its causes. The book presents substantial selections from the writings of Galileo, Newton, and Einstein, with additional selections from Aristotle, Oresme, Descartes, and Huygens. The book has extensive commentary aimed at guiding nonspecialist readers through the texts. At the same time, Crowe gives a "hands-on" account of the growth of mathematical physics, using only very simple algebra to re-state the less accessible earlier mathematics. Mechanics from Aristotle to Einstein is thus both a vivid introduction to the history of mechanics and a textbook in elementary mechanics. https://www.greenlion.com/books.html[12/18/20, 12:29:20 PM] Green Lion Press: Current Book List Newton, Maxwell, Marx: Spirit, Freedom, and the Scientific Vision by Thomas K. Simpson In these pages, we meet Isaac Newton, James Clerk Maxwell, and Karl Marx as we have never seen them before, as champions of a scientific vision that leads to intellectual freedom and human emancipation. We see Newton, the last of the alchemists, creating a visionary physics that was intended as a direct refutation of the dead mechanism of Cartesian philosophy. We see Maxwell striving to free the human intellect from the dogmatism of the "Newtonian" physics of his day, the champion of a new democratic science as exemplified by the work of Michael Faraday, a largely unschooled commoner. We are astonished to meet Marx, the ultimate libertarian, envisioning "a society in which the full and free development of every individual forms the ruling principle," a society that could be attained through a rational understanding deliberately constructed to emulate Newton's approach to physics. Newton's Forgotten Lunar Theory: His Contribution to the Quest for Longitude by Nicholas Kollerstrom Around the turn of the eighteenth century, one of the most pressing practical scientific problems was accurate prediction of the moon's position. Although Isaac Newton had hoped to solve this problem using the dynamic approach developed in Principia in 1687, he never succeeded in doing so. Instead, he reverted to an old-fashioned kinematic theory, using epicyclic motion. A terse summary of the theory was published in 1702 by David Gregory as part of his Astronomiae elementa. The present work includes Newton's full text of Theory of the Moon's Motion with annotations explaining terms and relating the text to Kollerstrom's analysis. In this detailed study, Kollerstrom solves the enigma of Newton's "forgotten" lunar theory. He ascertains, for the first time ever, just what Newton's theory did and did not achieve. https://www.greenlion.com/books.html[12/18/20, 12:29:20 PM] Green Lion Press: Current Book List Newton's Principia: The Central Argument by Dana Densmore This guidebook by Dana Densmore with translations and diagrams by William H. Donahue makes the great adventure of Principia available not only to modern scholars of history of science but also to nonspecialist undergraduate students of humanities. It moves carefully from Newton's definitions and axioms, through the essential propositions, as Newton himself identified them, to the establishment of universal gravitation and elliptical orbits. Now in its third edition, the guidebook presents Newton's original text (the selections newly translated for this edition), offers notes and questions for pondering, and then expands Newton's sketched proofs step by step. Following his original proofs exactly eliminates the common confusions and misinterpretations of what Newton assumed and what he proved in the course of the development of his great work. Optics by Johannes Kepler translated with diagrams by William H. Donahue The first complete translation of Kepler's Ad Vitellionem paralipomena, quibus astronomiae pars optica traditur (1604) by William H. Donahue, the translator of Kepler's New Astronomy. The Optics began as an attempt to give astronomical optics a solid foundation and soon transcended this narrow goal to become a complete reconstruction of the theory of light, the physiology of vision, and the mathematics of refraction. https://www.greenlion.com/books.html[12/18/20, 12:29:20 PM] Green Lion Press: Current Book List Selections from Kepler's Astronomia Nova by William H. Donahue A Science Classics Module for Humanities Studies A Green Cat Book An annotated translation of selections from Kepler's greatest work. Much of the book is nontechnical in nature, discussing gravity, the earth's motion (in relation to both physics and scriptural interpretation), and the physical aspects of the planets' motions. An excellent, brief introduction to Kepler's thought. Selections from Newton's Principia by Dana Densmore A Science Classics Module for Humanities Studies A Green Cat Book Newton’s new conception of the laws of the universe challenged centuries of received opinion and laid a new foundation for our “common sense” understanding of the physical world. If you have always wanted to know more about Newton’s achievement but thought it was the exclusive province of experts, this little book will guide you through the essentials of Newton’s argument in his own words and using only elementary mathematics.
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