<<

A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WRITINGS OF STILLMAN DRAKE

(compiled by James MacLachlan, with assistance from Andrew Ede)

1933 Stack-Up, a Checkerboard Game. Games Digest, 2: 3, 8-9. 1940 A. B. Johnson, A Treatise on Language, ed. & printed by Drake. San Francisco 1944 A. B. Johnson and his works on language. Etc.: A review of general semantics, 1: 238-252. 1948 and the weight of air. American Scientist, 36: 154. 1949 A Book ofAnglo-Saxon Verse. Nantucket [vere Oakland, ]. 1953 : Dialogue concerning the Two Chief World Systems - Ptolemaic and Copernican (1632) (Foreword by Albert Einstein). Berkeley: University of California Press. 1957 Galileo Gleanings 1. Some unpublished anecdotes of Galileo. Isis, 48: 393-397. More on Cesi and Galileo. Isis, 48: 65-66. Discoveries and Opinions of Gali/eo. New : Doubleday. Galileo Galilei: The Starry Messenger (1610). Discoveries and Opinions of Galileo, pp. 21-58. Galileo Galilei: History and Demonstrations concerning Sunspots (1613). Dis• coveries and Opinions of Galileo, pp. 87-144. Galileo Galilei: Letter to Madame Christina of Lorraine (1615). Discoveries and Opinions ofGalileo, pp. 173-216. Galileo Galilei: The Assayer (1623). Discoveries and Opinions of Galileo, pp. 229-280. 1958 Galileo Gleanings II. A kind word for Salusbury. Isis, 49: 26-33. Galileo Gleanings III. A kind word for Sizzi. Isis, 49: 155-165. Galileo Gleanings IV. Bibliographical notes. Isis, 49: 409-413. Galileo Gleanings V. The earliest version of Galileo's Mechanics. Osiris, "13: 269-290. Galileo on the need for experiments. Isis, 49: 172. Galileo's fallacy. Isis, 49: 345-346. The Starry Messenger. Isis, 49: 346-347. 1959 Concerning Cesi and Galileo. Isis, 50: 152. Galileo Gleanings VI. Galileo's first telescope at Padua and Venice. Isis, 50: 245-254. Arthur Koestler and his Sleepwalkers. Isis, 50: 255-260: with G. de Santillana. Galileo Gleanings VII. An unrecorded manuscript copy of Galileo's Cosmog• raphy. Physis, 1: 294-306. J. B. Stallo and the Critique of Classical . Evans, H. M. (ed), Men and Moments in the History ofScience. Seattle, Washington, pp. 22-37. 1960 The Controversy on the of 1618. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press: with C. D. O'Malley. Mario Guiducci: Discourse on the Comets (1619). Drake and O'Malley, Con• troversyon the Comets, pp. 21-65. Mario Guiducci: Letter to Tarquinio Galluzzi Sf (1620). Drake and O'Malley, Controversy on the Comets, pp. 133-150.

T. H. Levere and W. R. Shea (eds.), Nature, Experiment, and the Sciences, 339-344. © 1990 Kluwer Academic Publishers. 340 BIBLIOGRAPHY

Galileo Galilei: The Assayer (1623). Drake and O'Malley, Controversy on the Comets,pp.151-336. Galileo Gleanings VIII. The origins of Galileo's book on floating bodies and the question of the unknown academician. Isis, 51: 56-63. Galileo Gleanings IX. An unrecorded manuscript copy of Galileo's Use of the Compass. Physis, 2: 281-90. Note on the 's appearance in total eclipse, Isis. 51: 204. On certain deductions contained in M. Moscovici's paper. Physis, 2: 211-212. Galileo on Motion and Mechanics. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press: with I. E. Drabkin. Galileo Galilei: Le Meccaniche (ca 1600). Galileo on Motion and on Mechanics, pp.147-186. T. Salusbury, trans. Galileo: Discourse on Bodies in Water (1665). Urbana: University of lllinois Press. Galileo on equal speed offall. Isis, 51: 337-338. 1961 Galileo Gleanings xn. An unpublished letter of Galileo to Peiresc. Isis, 53: 201-211. 1962 Galileo Gleanings X. Origin and fate of Galileo's theory of the tides. Physis, 3: 185-194. Galileo Gleanings Xl. Further bibliographical notes. Physis, 4: 33-38. Galileo Gleanings Xlll. An unpublished fragment relating to the telescope and the Medicean stars. Physis, 4: 342-344. 1964 Galileo Gleanings XIV. Galileo and Girolamo Magagnati. Physis, 6: 269-286. Galileo and the law of inertia. American Journal of Physics, 32: 601-608. 1965 The Camberwell Poisoning Case, in West by One and by One, ed. P. Anderson. New York. pp. 88-101. L. Geymonat: Galileo Galileo. Biography & Inquiry into his Philosophy of Science New York: McGraw-Hill. (English translation with preface, additional notes, and appendix.) 1966 Galileo Gleanings XV. An unpublished letter, possibly by Galileo. Physis, 8: 247-252. Free fall in Galileo's Dialogue. Isis, 57: 269-271. Foreword. J. J. Langford, Galileo, Science, and the Church. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, pp. ix-xii. The Academia dei Lincei. Science, 151: 1194-1200. 1967 Mathematics, astronomy, and physics in the work of Galileo. C. S. Singleton (ed.) An, Science and History in the Renaissance. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press, pp. 305-330. A long-lost letter from Galileo to Peiresc on a magnetic clock. Dibner, B. A Letter from Galileo Galilei. Norwalk: Burndy Library, pp. 45-56. Bio-bibliographical Introduction. Thomas Salusbury: Mathematical collections and translations. : William Dawson & Sons, pp. 1-9. On the conflicting documents of Galileo's trial. florence: Atti del Symposio su Galileo Galilei nella storia e nella filosofia della scienza, pp. 55-65. Galileo: a biographical sketch. E. McMullin (ed.) Galileo, Man of Science. New York: Basic Books, pp. 52-66. Galileo in English literature of the seventeenth century. E. McMullin (ed.) Galileo, Man ofScience. New York: Basic Books, pp. 415-431. Stallo, John Bernard. P. Edwards (ed.), The Encyclopedia of Philosophy, 8 vols. New York: Macmillan. Vol. 8, pp. 4-6. BIBLIOGRAPHY 341

A seventeenth-century Malthusian. Isis, 58: 401-402. The concept of inertia. Saggi su Galileo Galilei. Florence: Barbera, pp. 1-14. 1968 Galileo Gleanings XVI. Semi-circular fall in the Dialogue. Physis, 10: 89-100. Galileo Gleanings XVII. The question of circular inertia. Physis, 10: 282-298. Galileo and "circular inertia". Acts of the 12th International Congress on the History of Science, 4: 53-55. 1969 Galileo Gleanings XVIII. Galileo's 1604 fragment on falling bodies. British Journalfor the History ofScience, 4: 340-358. Back from Limbo: the rediscovery of Alexander Bryan Johnson, in C. L. Todd & R. Blackford, eds., Language and Value. New York: Greenwood Press. [volume dedicated to Drake] pp. 3-15. Mechanics in Sixteenth-Century . Madison: University of Wisconsin Press: with I. E. Drabkin. Niccolo Tartaglia: New Science (1537). Mechanics in Sixteenth-Century Italy, pp. 63-97. Niccolo Tartaglia: Various Questions and Inventions (1546). Mechanics in Sixteenth-Century Italy, pp. 98-143. Guido Ubaldo: The Book of Mechanics (1577/1581). Mechanics in Sixteenth• Century Italy, pp. 241-328. The scientific personality of Galileo. Physis, 11: 181-194. Introduction. A. B. Johnson: The Meaning of Words (1854). New York: Greenwood Press, pp. i-iii. 1970 Galileo Gleanings XIX. Uniform acceleration, space and time. British Journal for the History ofScience, 5: 21-43. Galileo Studies: Personality, Tradition and Revolution. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. Bradwardine's function, mediate denomination and multiple continua. Physis, 11: 51-68. Early science and the printed book. Renaissance and Reformation, 6: 43-52. Renaissance music and experimental science. Journal of the History of Ideas, 31, 483-500. Biographies. C. C. Gillispie (ed.), The Dictionary of Scientific Biography. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1970-1980. B. Baldi, 1: 419-420; G. B. Baliani, 1: 424-425; D. Bartoli, 1: 483-484; G. B. Benedetti, 1: 604-609; G. Berti, 2: 83-84; B. Castelli, 3: 115-117; F. Cesi, 3: 179-180; G. Galilei, 5: 237-259; V. Galilei, 5: 249-250; J. A. Le Tenneur, 8: 267-269. 1971 The pseudo-Aristotelian Questions of Mechanics in renaissance culture. Studies in the Renaissance, 18: 65-104: with Paul L. Rose. The rule behind Mersenne's numbers. Physis, 13: 421-424. 1972 Galileo Gleanings XX. The uniform motion equivalent to a uniformly accel• erated motion from rest. Isis, 63: 28-38. Galileo Gleanings XXI. On the probable order of Galileo's notes on motion. Physis, 14: 55-68. A new view of Newton. Isis, 63: 24~-244. 1973 Galileo Gleanings XXII. Galileo's experimental confirmation of horizontal inertia: unpublished manuscripts. Isis, 64: 291-305. Galileo's "Platonic" cosmology and Kepler's Prodromus. Journal for the History ofAstronomy, 4: 174-191. Galileo's discovery of the law of free fall. Scientific American, 228, no. 5: 84- 92. 342 BIBLIOGRAPHY

Galileo's language: mathematics and poetry in a new science. Yale French Studies,49: 13-27. Copernicus, philosophy and science: Bruno-Kepler-Galileo. Norwalk: Bumdy Library. Medieval ratio theory vs compound medicines in the origins of Bradwardine's rule. Isis, 64: 67-77. Galileo Gleanings XXIll. Velocity and Eudoxian proportion theory. Physis, 15: 49-64. 1974 Galileo Galilei: [Discourses & Mathematical Demonstrations on] (1638). Madison: University of Wisconsin Press. Mathematics and discovery in Galileo's physics. Historia Mathematica, 1: 129- 150. Impetus theory and quanta of speed before and after Galileo. Physis, 16: 47-65. 1975 Galileo's discovery of the parabolic trajectory. Scientific American, 232, no. 3: 102-110: with J. MacLachlan. Reply to the Shea-Wolf critique. Isis, 66: 400-403: with J. MacLachlan. Galileo's new science of motion. M. L. Righini Bonelli & W. R. Shea (eds), Reason, Experiment and Mysticism. New York: Science History Publications, pp. 131-156. Free fall from Albert of Saxony to Honore Fabri. Studies in History and Philosophy ofScience, 5: 347-366. The role of music in Galileo's experiments. Scientific American, 232, no. 6: 98- 104. Impetus theory reappraised. Journal ofthe History ofIdeas, 36: 27-46. Copernicanism in Bruno, Kepler, and Galileo. A. Beer & K. A. Strand (eds), Vistas in Astronomy. Oxford: Pergamon Press, pp. 172-192. New light on a Galilean claim about . Isis, 66: 92-95. 1976 Galileo Against the Philosophers. : Zeitlin & Ver Brugge. Cecco di Ronchitti: Dialogue concerning the New Star (1605). Galileo Against the Philosophers, pp. 33-53. A. Mauri. Considerations on Discourse of Colombe on Star of 1604 (1606). Galileo Against the Philosophers, pp. 73-130. Galileo's first telescopic observations. Journal for the History of Astronomy, 7: 153-168. Galileo and the first mechanical computing device. Scientific American, 234, no. 4: 104-113. A further reappraisal of impetus theory: Buridan, Benedetti, and Galileo. Studies in History and Philosophy ofScience, 7: 319-336. The unsung journalist and the origin of the telescope. Los Angeles: Zeitlin & Ver Brugge. An agricultural economist of the late renaissance. B. S. Hall & D. C. West (eds), On Pre-modem Technology and Science. Malibu, California: Undena, pp. 53- 73. Galileo Gleanings XXIV. The evolution of De Motu. Isis, 67: 239-250. Galileo's work on free fall in 1604. Physis, 16: 309-322. Was Simon Mayr Galileo's "ancient advisory" in 16071 Isis, 67: 456-459. 1977 Tartaglia's squadra and Galileo's compasso. Annali dell'Istituto e Museo di Storia della Scienza di Firenze, 2: 35-54. BIBLIOGRAPHY 343

Galileo and the career of philosophy. Journal of the History ofIdeas, 38: 19-32. Galileo on sense experience and foundations of physics. Isis, 68: 108-110. Reply to Allan Franklin, Stillman Drake's "Impetus Theory reappraised". Journal of the History ofIdeas, 38: 315-316. 1978 Galileo at Work: His Scientific Biography. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Translations into Japanese and Italian. Galileo Galilei: Operations of the Geornetric and Military Compass (1606). Washington: Smithsonian Institution Press. Galileo's procedures, and metaphysics. E. G. Forbes (ed) Human Implications of Scientific Advance. Proceedings of the 15th International Congress on the History ofScience. Edinburgh, pp. 256-267. Ptolemy, Galileo and . Studies in History and Philosophy of Science, 9: 99-115. Reply to E. Rosen. Journal of the History ofIdeas, 39: 148. A memorial tribute to Kenneth O. May. Historia Mathematica, 5: 3-12. 1979 Galileo's Notes on Motion. Florence: Istituto e Museo di Storia della Scienza. Italy, science and modern culture. S. B. Chandler & J. A. Molinaro (eds). The Culture ofItaly. Toronto: Griffin House, pp. 142-155. History of science and tide theories. Physis, 21: 61-69. Galileo and satellite prediction. Journal for the History of Astronomy, 10: 75- 95. Eloge for Guglielmo Righini. Isis, 70: 552-554. 1980 Galileo. Oxford: Oxford University Press (translations into Hebrew, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, and French). Foreword. E. Bellone, A World on Paper. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, pp. xi• xiii. Newton's apple and Galileo's Dialogue. Scientific American, 243, no. 2: 151- 156. Galileo's sighting of Neptune. Scientific American, 243, no. 6: 74-81: with C. T. Kowal. Galileo's observations of Neptune. Nature, 287: 277-278: with C. T. Kowal. The title page and preface of Galileo's Dialogue. Quaderni d'Italianistica, 1: 139-156. Measurements in Galileo's science. History of Technology, 5: 39-54. Scientific discovery, logic and luck. The College (St. John's College), 32, no. 1: 45-48. 1981 Cause, Experiment and Science. A Galilean dialogue incorporating a new English translation of Galileo's "Discourse on things that rest upon water or move in it" (1612). Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Alleged departures from Galileo's law offall. Annals ofScience, 38: 339-342. Galileo's explorations in science. Dalhousie Review, 61: 217-232. 1982 Analysis of Galileo's experimental data. Annals ofScience, 39: 389-397. Vorwort zur Neuasgabe & Erganzungen zu den Ammerkungen Galileo: Dialog fiber die beiden hauptsiichlichs(en Weltsysteme, trans. E. Strauss. Stuttgart: Teubner, pp. 575-588. Dating unpublished notes such as Galileo's on motion, T. H. Levere (ed). Editing texts in the History of Science and Medicine. New York: Garland Publishing, pp. 13-37. 344 BIBLIOGRAPHY

Exact sciences, primitive instruments, and Galileo. Annali dell'lstituto e Museo di Storia della Scienza, 7, fasc. 2: 87-107. Galileo's Dialogue: AI descreto lettore. Scientia, 76: 249-261. Forming book collections. Toronto: The Amtmann Cirlce. 1983 Telescopes, Tides & Tactics: A Galilean dialogue about the Starry Messenger and Systems of the World. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Foreword. K. S. Chiku (ed), The Dawn of Science and Technology. Tokyo: Kanazawa Institute Technical Press. Galileo: 10 processarono i filosofi, non la Chiesa. L' Unita di Milano, 1 May, p. 13. Galileo semantico.lntersezioni, 3: 45-55. The organizing theme of the Dialogue. Atti dei Convegni Lincei, 55: 101-114. Galileo and the church. Revista di Studi Italiani, 1: 82-97. 1984 Galileo, Kepler, and phases of . Journal for the History of Astronomy, 15: 198-208. 1985 Galileo and mathematical physics. C. Mangione (ed) Scienza e Filosofia. Milan: Garzanti, pp. 627-642. Galileo's accuracy in measuring horizontal projections. Annali dell'lstituto e Museo di Storia della Scienza. Florence: X, fasc. 1: 3-14. 1986 Re-examining Galileo's Dialogue. W. A. Wallace (ed). Reinterpreting Galileo. Washington: Catholic University of America Press, pp. 155-175. Literacy and scientific notations. M. E. Wrolstad & D. F. Fisher (eds), Toward a New Understanding ofLiteracy. New York: Praeger, pp. 135-155. Galileo's physical measurements. American Journal ofPhysics, 54: 302-306. Galileo's pre-Paduan writings: years, sources, motivations. Studies in History and Philosophy of Science, 17: 429-448. Galileo and the projection argument. Annals ofScience, 43: 77-79. A neglected Galilean letter. Journal for the history ofastronomy, 17: 99-108. History of Italian science. Italian Civilization and Non-Italian Scholars, Pisa: Giardini, pp. 191-198. 1987 Euclid Book V from Eudoxus to Dedekind. I. Grattan-Guinness (ed): History in Mathematics Education. In the series: Cahiers d'Histoire et de philosophie des sciences. : Belin, pp. 52-64. Galileo's constant. Nuncius, 2: 41-54. Galileo's steps to full Copernicanism - and back. Studies in History and Philosophy ofScience, 18: 93-105. Galileo's accuracy,in measuring horizontal projections. Annali dell'Istituto e Museo di Storia della Scienza, No. 21. 1988 The tower argument in the Dialogue. Annals ofScience, 45: 295-302. 1989 Hipparchus-Geminus-Galileo. Studies in History and Philosophy of Science, 20: 147-56. Two New Sciences Including Centers of Gravity and Force of Percussion, 2nd edn. with new Introduction. Toronto: Wall and Thompson. A History of Free Fall Aristotle to Galileo. With an Epilogue on 11: in the Sky. Toronto: Wall and Thompson. Galileo: Pioneer Scientist. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. Galileo's gravitational units. The Physics Teacher, 27: 432-436. INDEX OF NAMES

Alberti, Leon Battista 171-172, 175, Blasius 336 186 Bohr, Niels 310-311 Alfonso X 17 9 Boltzmann, Ludwig 289,316 Alhazen (Ibn AI-Haytham) 147-149, Bonamicus, Franciscus 33 151-153,155,157,159 Borrus, Hieronimus 33,44 Alioto, Anthony 129 Boscovich, Rudjer Josip 241 Ampere, Andre-Marie 290 Boyle, Robert 316 Angelis, Mutius De 29,36-38 Bradwardine, Thomas 123,336 Apelles 330,332 Brahe, Tycho 71,118,140,166,175, Apollonius 114 191,329,332 Archimedes 46, 113-114, 167, 208, Braun, Alexander 242 327 Brecht Bertholt 135 Aristotle 5, 15, 20, 25, 34-35, 42-43, Brengger, Johann Georg 57-58 45-46,52,124,126,129,136-137, Bronowski, Jacob 135 138, 151, 154-155, 157, 160-161, Buchwald,Jed 275 325-326,334 Burtt, A. E. 110-113 A vicenna (Ibn Sina) 147 Butterfield, Herbert 127 Az-Zarqal 171,175 Campanella, Tommaso 113,125 Babbage, Charles 229,241 Capra, Baldessar 324,328 Bacon, Francis 107-108, 148, 225- Carbonbe, Ludovico 8,11-14,17,28, 226,244,317 30-31,33,39,41-42,46 Banks,Joseph 219 Cardano, Girolamo 168 Barbarini, Maffeo 333 Caribous, Iacobus 29 Barrow, Isaac 111-112 Carosus, Placiduc 42 AI-Battani 171-173, 175-176, 178, Cassini 199-201,203-204 181,185,187-188 Castelli, Benedetto 330,335 Beddoes, Thomas 219 Cavalieri, Bonaventura 335 Bellone, Enrico 307 Cavendish, Henry 208,241 Ben Moshe, Jehuda 179 Caverni, Raffaello 77 Ben Sid, Isaac 179 Cesarini, Virginio 332 Benedetti, Giovanni Battista 46 Cesi, Frederico 331,333 Bemegger, Mathias 327-328 Chaptal 220 Berthollet, Claude Louis 216 Christina, Grand Duchess 331 Bessarion, Cardinal Johannes 166- Christophoro 168 167,169-170,174,190 Clausius, Rudolf 316 Besso,Michele 307-310 Clavius, Christopher 6,17,20,28,31, Bethune, Drinkwater 229 33,35,42 Bianchi, Luca 311 Cohen, 1. B. 134-135, 199 Bianchini, Giovanni 165, 167-170, Colbert 200, 202 175,182,186,190 Colombe, Ludovico Delle 325,329 345 346 INDEX OF NAMES

Condillac, Etienne Bonnot De 210- Faber, Honore 334 214 Al-Farghani 185,187 Copernicus, Nicholas 51-52,66, 114, Fantonius, Father Philippus 34,44 118, 138, 140, 166, 175, 199, 326, Faraday, Michael 278-282,284,287- 329,331,334,336 289,297-298,300 Coresio, Giorgio 330 Favaro, Antonio xn, 32, 34, 37,44,77, Corvinus, Matthias 169 116,133 Coulomb, Charles Augustin 324 Fechner, Gustav 278-282, 284, 287- Cremonensis, Jacobus 167 289,291-293,298 Cremonin, Cesare 108,324 Fermi, Enrico 315 Crombie, A. C. 43 Ficino, Marsilio 115,117 Curtze, M. 186 Finocchiaro, Maurice A. 127-128, 135-137,139 D'Alembert,JeanLeRond 210-211 Fitzroy, Robert 231,234-238 D'Elci, Arturo 330 Fludd, Robert 113 Dalton, John 228 Fons, Dionigius 44 Danesi, Luca 327 Fortin, Nicolas 208,217-218 Dante 37-38 Foscarini, Paolo Antonio 331 Darwin, Charles IX, 242-243, 249- Foucault, Michel 249 270,321 Franklin, Benjamin 215 Dee, John 113 Fredette, Raymond 43,45-46 Descartes, Rene 105-106, 109, 119, Fuligati, Franciscus 36 126,129-132,148 Dibner XI Galen 147,151 Diophantus 170 Galilei, Galileo IX-XII, 3-6, 8, 10- Dirac, Paul 277 18,20-23,25,27-28,30-39,41- Domenico 200 47, 51-52, 54-74, 77-98, 107- Dove, H. W. 231,237 119, 123-137, 139-142, 166, 187- Drabkin, I. E. XI, 43 188, 191, 199-200, 225, 244, 249, Drake, Stillman XI-XIII, 3-4, 8, 30, 271,307,311-313,317,321-336 32-38,43-47,51,55,59-61,65- Galluzzi, R. P. Tarquinio 78,332 67,69-74,77-78, 107-112, 116, Galton, Francis 225, 237-238, 239- 123-130, 132-137, 139, 142, 188, 240 249,271,321-325,327-331,333- Gassendi, Pierre 335 337 Gauss, Carl Friedrich 230-231 Gibbone, Richardus 36 Edwards, William 34 Gibbs, Willard 241 Ehrenberg, Christian Gottfried 268- Gould, John 258-259,262,264 269 Grant, Robert 250-251,269 Einstein, Albert 129, 307-311, 313, Grassi,Orazio 108,140,332-333 321,334 Graunt, John 229 Elzevir, Louis 334 Gray, Asa 243 Estensi 167 Grazia, Vincenzio Di 329-330 Euclid 43,147,335,336 Guiducci, Mario 140,332 Euler 212 Eutocius 167 Hales, Stephen 218, 228 INDEX OF NAMES 347

Hall, Boas Marie 225 Lamarck, Jean Baptiste Pierre Antoine Hall, A. Rupert 105,135 De Monet De 250, 265-266, 268- Harriot, Thomas 313 269 Harrison, John 208 Landau, Horace 324 Harvey, William 108 Landon,FUchard 321 Heaviside, Oliver 275,301 Lansberg, Philip van 337 Helmholtz, Herman von 275-289, Laplace, Pierre-Simon, Marquise De 291-292,294-303 210,216-218 Henslow, John Stevens 249, 252, Lavoisier, Antoine-Laurent 207-220, 265-266 228 Herschel, John 225-227, 232, 235, Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm 111 241-244 Levere, Trevor 207 Herschel, William 199 Liceti, Fortunio 108 Hertz, Heinrich 275-277, 281, 283, Locke,John 211 286,287-303 Lorenzini, Antonio 324 Hill, David 78 Lorinus, Ioannes 5,8,11,13-14,17, Hodge, M. J. S. 249 28,30 Holmes, Sherlock 271,322 Lyell, Charles 249-250, 252-253, Honeyman, Robert 331 257,259,261,264-266,268 Hooker, Joseph 242-243 Humboldt, Alexander von 231 Mach, Ernst 128 Hunayn Ibn Ishaq 147 Maclachlan, James 123,132 Huxley, Thomas Henry 242 Magrini, S. 186 Huygens, Christiaan 113, 133, 200, Malthus, Thomas Robert 229,242 204,334,335 Manutius, Aldus 326 Mariotte, Edme 316 Isocrates 44 Marulm, Martinus van 219-220 Mauri, Alimberto 55, 325 Jevons, William Stanley 207-209, Maurice 54 225,228,239 Maury, Matthew Fontaine 232, 233 Johnson, Alexander Byron XI, XII, Maxwell, James Clerk 208, 225, 236, 322 278-282,284,286,289,294,297- Jones, Robertus 8, 11, 13-14 298,300-301,314,316-317 Joyce, James 322 Mayr, Simon 324 Mazzoni, Jacopo 43, 46, 52 Kepler, Johannes 52, 59-60, 62, 65, Medici, Granduke Cosimo 62 72-74, 113, 127, 148, 166, 191, Medici, Prince Cosimo De 328 200,329,336 Meeus 61 Al-Kindi 147 Megnie, Pierre-Bernard 208,217-218 Koyre, Alexandre 77, 114-116, 119, Meineke 268 123-124, 127-129, 132, 134-135, Menu, Antonius 5,13,17-18,20,22, 249 25,28-31,35-38,46 Mersenne, Marin 327,334-335 Lacy, Conde De 219 Merton, R. J. 249 Lagalla, Giulio Cesare 329 Monte, Guidobaldo Del 324,327,335 Lagrange, Joseph Louis 212 More,Hemy 112,117-119 348 INDEX OF NAMES

Morgan, Augustus De 334 Regiomontanus 165-170, 175, 176, Morveau 220 178-179,181-191,326 Moss,JeanDietz 39,41 Renn, Jtirgen 77 Muller, Johannes (See Regiomontanus) Rheticus 199-200 Muller, Johannes Peter 268-269 Ricci,Ostillio 335-336 Murr, C. T. von 186 Righini, Guglielmo 56 Rocco, Antonio 334 Naylor, Ronald H. 78 Roche, John 313 Newton, Isaac 105-107, 109-112, Roder, Christian 165 114, 116, 123, 129-132, 200, 209, Ronchitti, Cecco Di 324 225,315,334-335 Ross, J. C. 230 Nicolo, Borso 167-168 Rouelle, H. M. 215 Nicolo, Leonello 167 Rue, Warren De La 236, 239 Nicolo, Marchese 167 Rugerius, Ludnovicus 6-8, 11, 13-15, 17,20,22,25,27,28-31,36-37,46 Ohin, Georg Simon 285,295,298 O'Malley, C. D. XI Sabine, Edward 231,234,237,242 Oppolzer, Theoder Ritter von 189 Sacrobosco, Johannes De 51,325 Oresme, Nicholas 90,112,336 Sadleir, Michael 323 Oughtred, William 119 Sadler,J. 219 Owen, Richard 260,264,268 Sagredo 95,110,131,137-139,141, 312-313 Palmerini, Tommaso 330 Salusbury, Thomas XI, 334 Papazzoni, Flaminio 329 Salviati 78, 95, 109, 125-127, 130, Pardies, Gaston 111 137-139,141-142,334 Pecham, John 148 Sarsi, Lothario 140 Perrault 202 Sarton, George XIIl Petty, William 229 Scheiner, Christopher 188,330-333 Petmccioli, Sandro 311 Schmitt, Charles 44 Peuerbach, Georg 166-167, 171, Schoener, Johann 167,183,189 175-176,178-183,186,326 Schroeder, Herr 186,299 Pius II 167 Sedgwick, Adam 230,241-242 Plato 52,115 Settle, Thomas 77,132-133 Plotinos 117 Shea, William R. 51 Politi, Blassano 336 Simplicio 95, 126, 130-131, 137- Powell, Baden 226-227 139,141,311-312 Priestley, Joseph 215,218 Sizzi, Francesco 329 Proust, Joseph-Louis 219 Sloan, Phillip 250,255-256,266-270 Ptolemy (Claudius Ptolemaeus) 114, Smith, A. 147 136,147-155,157,159-161,165- Smith, H. J. S. 236 166,168,171-173,175-176,178, Souffrin, Pierre 78 181-182,185-190,325-326,334 Speier, Jacob von 165 Stelluti, Francesco 333 Quetelet, Adolphe 229-230,232 Stewart, Balfour 240 Stokes, G. G. 225,236,239 Ramsden, Jesse 208-209,217 Sulloway, Frank 250, 257, 259, 262- R'Atdolt, Erhard 336 263,270 INDEX OF NAMES 349

Swerdlow, Noel 165 17, 22-23, 25, 28-31, 36-38, Sylvester, James Joseph 236 46 Viviani, Vincenzio 335 Tartaglia, Niccolo 335,336 Tenneur, Jacques-Alexandre Le 335 Wallace, William A. IX, 3 Thabit Ibn Qurra 171, 175-176, Wallis, John 225-226,244 179 Weber, Wilhelm 278-282, 284, 287- Thompson, Sir William 298 289,291-293,298 Thomson, William 242 Weisner, Mark 330-331 Torricelli, Evangelista 335 Wheatstone, Charles 236 Toscanelli,Paolo 171-172,175,186 Whewell, William 225-227, 242-244 Trismegistus, Hermes 117 Wilkins, John 119 Winch, P. 105 Urban VII 139,333 Wisan, Winifred 78 Witelo, (Vitello) 148 Valius, Paulus 8, 11-14, 17,20-22, Wittgenstein, Ludwig XI, 271 25,28-31,33-39,42,45 Wohlwill, Emil 77 Verinus, Franciscus 33 Wren, Sir Christopher 333 Vitelleschus, Mutius 8, 11, 13-14, Wrottesley, John Baron 233 BOSTON STUDIES IN THE PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE

Editors:

ROBERT S. COHEN and MARX W. WARTOFSKY (Boston University)

1. Marx W. Wartofsky (ed.), Proceedings of the Boston Colloquium for the Philosophy ofScience 1961-1962. 1963. 2. Robert S. Cohen and Marx W. Wartofsky (eds.), In Honor of Philipp Frank. 1965. 3. Robert S. Cohen and Marx W. Wartofsky (eds.), Proceedings of the Boston Colloquium for the Philosophy of Science 1964-1966. In Memory of Norwood Russell Hanson. 1967. 4. Robert S. Cohen and Marx W. Wartofsky (eds.), Proceedings of the Boston Colloquiumfor the Philosophy ofScience 1966-1968.1969. 5. Robert S. Cohen and Marx W. Wartofsky (eds.), Proceedings of the Boston Colloquiumfor the Philosophy ofScience 1966-1968.1969. 6. Robert S. Cohen and Raymond J. Seeger (eds.), Ernst Mach: Physicist and Philosopher. 1970. 7. Milic Capek. Bergson and Modern Physics. 1971. 8. Roger C. Buck and Robert S. Cohen (eds.), PSA 1970. In Memory of Rudolf Carnap. 1971. 9. A. A. Zinov'ev, Foundations of the Logical Theory of Scientific Knowledge (Complex Logic). (Revised and enlarged English edition with an appendix by G. A. Smirnov, E. A. Sidorenka, A. M. Fedina, and L. A. Bobrova). 1973. 10. Ladislav Tondl, Scientific Procedures. 1973. 11. R. J. Seeger and Robert S. Cohen (eds.), Philosophical Foundations ofScience. 1974. 12. Adolf Grtinbaum, Philosophical Problems of Space and Time. (Second, enlarged edition). 1973. 13. Robert S. Cohen and Marx W. Wartofsky (eds.), Logical and Epistemological Studies in Contemporary Physics. 1973. 14. Robert S. Cohen and Marx W. Wartofsky (eds.), Methodological and Histori• cal Essays in the Natural and Social Sciences. Proceedings of the Boston Colloquiumfor the Philosophy ofScience 1969-1972.1974. 15. Robert S. Cohen, J. J. Stachel, and Marx W. Wartofsky (eds.), For Dirk Struik. Scientific, Historical and Political Essays in Honor ofDirk Struik. 1974. 16. Norman Geschwind, Selected Papers on Language and the Brain. 1974 17. B. G. Kuznetsov, Reason and Being: Studies in Classical Rationalism and Non-Classical Science. 1987 18. Peter Mittelstaedt, Philosophical Problems ofModern Physics. 1976 19. Henry Mehlberg, Time, Causality, and the Quantum Theory (2 vols.). 1980. 20. Kenneth F. Schaffner and Robert S. Cohen (eds.), Proceedings of the 1972 Biennial Meeting, Philosophy ofScience Association. 1974 21. R. S. Cohen and 1. 1. Stachel (eds.), Selected Papers of Leon Rosenfeld. 1978. 22. Milic Capek (ed.), The Concepts ofSpace and Time. Their Structure and Their Development. 1976. 23. Marjorie Grene, The Understanding of Nature, Essays in the Philosophy of Biology. 1974. 24. Don llide, Technics and Praxis. A Philosophy ofTechnology. 1978. 25. Jaakko Hintikka and Unto Remes, The Method of Analysis. Its Geometrical Origin and Its General SignifICance. 1974. 26. John Emery Murdoch and Edith Dudley SylIa, The Cultural Context of Medieval Learning. 1975. 27. Marjorie Grene and Everett Mendelsohn (eds.), Topics in the Philosophy of Biology. 1976. 28. Joseph Agassi, Science in Flux. 1975. 29. Jerzy J. Wiatr (ed.), Polish Essays in the Methodology of the Social Sciences. 1979. 30. Peter Janich, Protophysics ofTime. 1985. 31. Robert S. Cohen and Marx W. Wartofsky (eds.), Language, Logic and Method. 1983. 32. R. S. Cohen, C. A. Hooker, A. C. Michalos, and J. W. van Evra (eds.), PSA 1974: Proceedings of the 1974 Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association. 1976. 33. Gerald Holton and William Blanpied (eds.), Science and Its Public: The Changing Relationship. 1976. 34. Mirko D. Grmek (ed.), On Scientific Discovery. 1980. 35. Stefan Amsterdamski, Between Experience and Metaphysics. Philosophical Problems ofthe Evolution ofScience. 1975. 36. Mihailo Markovic and Gajo Petrovic (eds.), Praxis, Yugoslav Essays in the Philosophy and Methodology ofthe Social Sciences. 1979. 37. Hennann von Helmholtz, Epistemological Writings. The Paul HertzlMorilz Schlick Centenary Edmon of 1921 wilh Notes and Commentary by the Edilors. (Newly translated by Malcolm F. Lowe. Edited, with an Introduction and Bibliography, by Robert S. Cohen and Yehuda Elkana). 1977. 38. R. M. Martin, Pragmatics, Truth, andLanguage. 1979. 39. R. S. Cohen, P. K. Feyerabend, and M. W. Wartofsky (eds.), Essays in Memory ofImreLakatos.1976. 40. B. M. Kedrov and V. Sadovsky. CUTTent Soviet Studies in the Philosophy of Science. Forthcoming. 41. M. Raphael, Theorie des Geistigen Schaffens auf Marxistischer Grundlage. Forthcoming. 42. Humberto R.Maturana and Francisco J. Varela, Autopoiesis and Cognilion. The Realization ofthe Living. 1980. 43. A. Kasher (ed.), Language in Focus: Foundations, Methods and Systems. Essays Dedicated to Yehoshua Bar-Hillel. 1976. 44. Trin Due Thao, Investigations into the Origin ofLanguage and Consciousness. (Translated by Daniel 1. Herman and Robert L. Annstrong; edited by Carolyn R. Fawcett and Robert S. Cohen). 1984. 45. A. Ishimoto (ed.), Japanese Studies in the History and Philosophy of Science. 46. Peter L. Kapitza, Experiment, Theory, Practice. 1980. 47. Maria L. Dalla Chiara (ed.), Italian Studies in the Philosophy ofScience. 1980. 48. Marx W. Wartofsky, Models; Representation and the Scientific Understanding. 1979. 49. Trm Duc Thao, Phenomenology and Dialectical Materialism. 1985. 50. Yehuda Fried and Joseph Agassi, Paranoia; A Study in Diagnosis. 1976. 51. Kurt H. Wolff, Surrender and Catch; Experience and Inquiry Today. 1976. 52. Karel Kosik, Dialectics of the Concrete. 1976. 53. Nelson Goodman, The Structure ofAppearance. (Third edition). 1977. 54. Herbert A. Simon, Models of Discovery and Other Topics in the Methods of Science. 1977. 55. Morris Lazerowitz, The Language of Philosophy. Freud and Wittgenstein. 1977. 56. Thomas Nickles (ed.), Scientific Discovery, Logic, and Rationality. 1980. 57. Joseph Margolis, Persons and Minds. The Prospects of Nonreductive Materialism. 1977. 58. G. Radnitzky and G. Andersson (eds.), Progress and Rationality in Science, 1978. 59. Gerard Radnitzky and Gunnar Andersson (eds.). The Structure and Develop- ment ofScience. 1979. 60. Thomas Nickles (ed.), Scientific Discovery; Case Studies. 1980. 61. Maurice A. Finocchiaro, Galileo and the Art ofReasoning. 1980. 62. William A. Wallace, Prelude to Galileo. 1981. 63. Friedrich Rapp, Analytical Philosophy ofTechnology. 1981. 64. Robert S. Cohen and Marx W. Wartofsky (eds.), Hegel and the Sciences. 1984. 65. Joseph Agassi, Science and Society. 1981. 66. Ladislav Tondl, Problems of Semantics. 1981. 67. Joseph Agassi and Robert S. Cohen (eds.), Scientific P hilosophy Today. 1982. 68. Wiadysiaw Krajewski (ed.), Polish Essays in the Philosophy of the Natural Sciences. 1982. 69. James H. Fetzer, Scientific Knowledge. 1981. 70. Stephen Grossberg, Studies ofMind and Brain. 1982. 71. Robert S. Cohen and Marx W. Wartofsky (eds.), Epistemology, Methodology, and the Social Sciences. 1983. 72. Karel Berka, Measurement. 1983. 73. G. L. Pandit, The Structure and Growth ofScientific Knowledge. 1983. 74. A. A. Zinov'ev, Logical Physics. 1983. 75. Gilles-Gaston Granger, Formal Thought and the Sciences ofMan. 1983. 76. R. S. Cohen and L. Laudan (eds.), Physics, Philosophy and Psychoanalysis. 1983. . 77. G. Bohme et al., Finalization in Science, ed. by W. Schlifer. 1983. 78. D. Shapere, Reason and the Searchfor Knowledge. 1983. 79. G. Andersson, Rationality in Science and Politics. 1984. 80. P. T. Durbin and F. Rapp, Philosophy and Technology. 1984. 81. M. Markovic, Dialectical Theory ofMeaning. 1984. 82. R. S. Cohen and M. W. Wartofsky, Physical Sciences and . 1984. 83. E. Meyerson, The Relativistic Deduction. 1985. 84. R. S. Cohen and M. W. Wartofsky, Methodology, Metaphysics and the History ofSciences. 1984. 85. Gy6rgy Tamas, The Logic ofCategories. 1985. 86. Sergio L. de C. Fernandes, Foundationr ofObjective Knowledge. 1985. 87. Robert S. Cohen and Thomas Schnelle (eds.), Cognition and Fact. 1985. 88. Gideon Freudenthal, Atom and Individual in the Age ofNewton. 1985. 89. A. Donagan, A. N. Perovich, Jr., and M. V. Wedin (eds.), Human Nature and Natural Knowledge. 1985. 90. C. Mitcham and A. Huning (eds.), Philosophy and Technology II. 1986. 91. M. Grene and D. Nails (eds.), Spinoza and the Sciences. 1986. 92. S. P. Turner, The Searchfor a Methodology of Social Science. 1986. 93. I. C. Jarvie, Thinking about Society: Theory and Practice. 1986. 94. Edna Ullmann-Margalit (ed.), The Kaleidoscope ofScience. 1986. 95. Edna Ullmann-Margalit (ed.), The Prism ofScience. 1986. 96. G. Markus, Language and Production. 1986. 97. F. Amrine, F. J. Zucker, and H. Wheeler (eds.), Goethe and the Sciences: A Reappraisal.1987. 98. Joseph C. Pitt and Marcella Pera (eds.), Rational Changes in Science. 1987. 99. O. Costa de Beauregard, Time, the Physical Magnitude. 1987. 100. Abner Shimony and Debra Nails (eds.), Naturalistic Epistemology: A Symposium ofTwo Decades. 1987. 101. Nathan Rotenstreich, Time and Meaning in History. 1987. 102. DavidB. Zilberman (ed.), The Birth ofMeaning in Hindu Thought. 1987. 103. Thomas F. Glick (ed.), The Comparative Reception ofRelativity. 1987. 104. Zellig Harris et al., The Form ofInformation in Science. 1987 105. Frederick Burwick, Approaches to Organic Form: Permutationr in Science and Culture. 1987. 106. M. Almasi, Philosophy ofAppearances. Forthcoming. 107. S. Hook, W. L. O'Neill, and R. O'Toole, Philosophy, History and Social Action. Essays in Honor ofLewis Feuer. 1988. 108. I. Hronszky, M. Feher, and B. Dajka (eds.), Scientific Knowledge Socialized. Selected Proceedings of the Fifth Joint International Conference on History and Philosophy of Science Organized by the IUHPS, Veszprem, 1984. Forthcoming. 109. P. Tillers and E. D. Green (eds.), Probability and Inference in the Law of Evidence. The Uses and Limits ofBayesianism. 1988. 110. E. Ullmann-Margalit (ed.), Science in Reflection. The Israel Colloquium: Studies in History, Philosophy, and Sociology ofScience. 1988. 111. K. Gavroglu, Y. Goudaroulis, and P. Nicolacopoulos (eds.), Imre Lakatos and Theories of ScientifIC Change. 1989. 112. Barry Glassner and Jonathan D. Moreno (eds.), The Qualitative-Quantitative Distinction in the Social Sciences. 1989. 113. K. Arens, Structures of Knowing: Psychologies of the Nineteenth Century. 1989. 114. A. Janik, Style, Politics and the Future of Philosophy. 1989. 115. F. Amrine (ed.), Literature and Science as Modes ofExpression. 1989. 116. James Robert Brown and Jtirgen Mittelstrass (eds.), An Intimate Relation: Studies in the History and Philosophy of Science Presented to Robert E. Butts on his 60th Birthday. 1989. 117. F. D'Agostino and I. C. Jarvie (eds.), Freedom and Rationality: Essays in Honor ofJohn Watkins. 1989. 118. D. Zolo, Reflective Epistemology: The Philosophical Legacy of Otto Neurath. 1989. 119. Michael Kearn, Bernard S. Phillips and Robert S. Cohen (eds.), George Simmel and Contemporary Sociology. 1989. 120. Trevor H. Levere and William R. Shea (eds.), Nature, Experiment, and the Sciences: Essays on Galileo and the History of Science in Honour of Stillman Dralu!. 1989.