The Birth of
Science: Ancient Times to 1699 (1993)
by Ray Spangenburg & Diane Kit Moser
by Ray Spangenburg & Diane Kit Moser
This wonderful hardcover
book is under The History of Science
series. There are five volume in all: #1 The Birth of Science, #2 The Rise of
Reason, #3 The Age of Synthesis, #4 Modern Science, and #5 Science Frontiers.
This book – or this Series – explores the progress of science through
discovery, innovation, collaboration, and experimentation. In The Birth of Science the authors examine
the scientific ideas developed by the early Greek, the advances of the Middle
Ages and the Renaissance, and the momentous discoveries of the Scientific
Revolution in the 17th century. The book details the work of the “giants” of
science (such as Aristotle, Copernicus, Galileo, Newton and Hooke),
contributions of diverse cultures, especially Islamic, Chinese and Indian
science, and other historical insights.
This book is divided into
four parts:
#1 Precursors of Science:
From Ancient Time to the Middle Ages
#2 The Scientific
Revolution in the Physical Science
#3 The Scientific
Revolution in the Life Sciences
#4 Science, Society, and
the Scientific Revolution
I love science. I think
Isaac Newton spoke for the spirit of science – the thirsty quest for knowledge
and the ever-growing recognition that the more we discover, the more intriguing
questions arise – when he writes, “I do not know what I
may appear to the world, but to myself I seem to have been only like a boy
playing on the seashore, and diverting myself in now and then finding another
smoother pebble, or a prettier shell than ordinary, while the great ocean of
truth lay all undiscovered before me"
THINK BIG.
START SMALL. GO DEEP.
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