The Copernican Question :Prognostication, Skepticism, and Celestial Order

Publication subTitle :Prognostication, Skepticism, and Celestial Order

Author: Westman > Robert  

Publisher: University Of California Press‎

Publication year: 2011

E-ISBN: 9780520948167

P-ISBN(Paperback): 9780520254817

Subject: P1-091.3 Middle Ages

Keyword: 世界史

Language: ENG

Access to resources Favorite

Disclaimer: Any content in publications that violate the sovereignty, the constitution or regulations of the PRC is not accepted or approved by CNPIEC.

Description

In 1543, Nicolaus Copernicus publicly defended his hypothesis that the earth is a planet and the sun a body resting near the center of a finite universe. But why did Copernicus make this bold proposal? And why did it matter? The Copernican Question reframes this pivotal moment in the history of science, centering the story on a conflict over the credibility of astrology that erupted in Italy just as Copernicus arrived in 1496. Copernicus engendered enormous resistance when he sought to protect astrology by reconstituting its astronomical foundations. Robert S. Westman shows that efforts to answer the astrological skeptics became a crucial unifying theme of the early modern scientific movement. His interpretation of this "long sixteenth century," from the 1490s to the 1610s, offers a new framework for understanding the great transformations in natural philosophy in the century that followed.

Chapter

Categories of Description and Explanation

I: Copernicus’s Space of Possibilities

1. The Literature Of The Heavens And The Science Of The Stars

Printing, Planetary Theory, and the Genres of Forecast

Copernicus’s Exceptionalism

Practices of Classifying Heavenly Knowledge and Knowledge Makers

The Science of the Stars

The Career of the Theorica/Practica Distinction

Theoretical Astrology: From the Arabic to the Reformed, Humanist Tetrabiblos

The Order of the Planets and Copernicus’s Early Formation

Copernicus’s Problematic: The Unresolved Issues

2. Constructing The Future

The Annual Prognostication

The Popular Verse Prophecies

Sites of Prognostication

3. Copernicus And The Crisis Of The Bologna Prognosticators, 1496–1500

The Bologna Period, 1496–1500: An Undisturbed View

From the Krakow Collegium Maius to the Bologna Studium Generale

Bologna and the “Horrible Wars of Italy”

The Astrologers’ War

Pico against the Astrologers

Domenico Maria Novara and Copernicus in the Bologna Culture of Prognostication

Prognosticators, Humanists, and the Sedici

Copernicus, Assistant and Witness

The Averroists and the Order of Mercury and Venus

Copernicus’s Commentariolus or, Perhaps, the Theoric of Seven Postulates

Copernicus, Pico, and De Revolutionibus

II: Confessional and Interconfessional Spaces of Prophecy and Prognostication

4. Between Wittenberg And Rome: The New System, Astrology, and the End of the World

Melanchthon, Pico, and Naturalistic Divination

Rheticus’s Narratio Prima in the Wittenberg-Nuremberg Cultural Orbit

World-Historical Prophecy and Celestial Revolutions

Celestial Order and Necessity

Necessity in the Consequent

The Astronomy without Equants

Principles versus Tables without Demonstrations

The Publication of De Revolutionibus: Osiander’s “Ad Lectorem”

Holy Scripture and Celestial Order

De Revolutionibus: Title and Prefatory Material

The “Principal Consideration”

5. The Wittenberg Interpretation of Copernicus’s Theory

Melanchthon and the Science of the Stars at Wittenberg

The Melanchthon Circle, Rheticus, and Albertine Patronage

Rheticus, Melanchthon, and Copernicus: A Psychodynamic Hypothesis

Erasmus Reinhold, Albrecht, and the Formation of the Wittenberg Interpretation

The Prutenic Tables, Patronage, and the Organization of Heavenly Literature

The Consolidation of the Wittenberg Interpretation

The Advanced Curriculum at Wittenberg

Germany as the “Nursery of Mathematics”

Conclusion

6. Varieties Of Astrological Credibility

Marking the Dangers of Human Foreknowledge

Becoming a Successful Prognosticator

Multiplying Genitures

From Wittenberg to Louvain: Astrological Credibility and the Copernican Question

John Dee and Louvain: Toward an Optical Reformation of Astrology

Jofrancus Offusius’s Semi-Ptolemaic Solution to the Variation in Astral Powers

Skirting the Margins of Dangerous Divination

7. Foreknowledge, Skepticism, And Celestial Order In Rome

De Revolutionibus at the Papal Court: A Stillborn (Negative) Reaction

The Holy Index and the Science of the Stars

Making Orthodoxy: Learned Advice from Trent

Astrology, Astronomy, and the Certitude of Mathematics in Post-Tridentine Heavenly Science

The Jesuits’ “Way of Proceeding”: The Teaching Ministry, the Middle Sciences, Astrology, and Celestial Order

Clavius on the Order of the Planets

Disciplinary Tensions

Astronomy in a Hexameral Genre: Robert Bellarmine

III: Accommodating Unanticipated, Singular Novelties

8. Planetary Order, Astronomical Reform, And The Extraordinary Course Of Nature

Astronomical Reform and the Interpretation of Celestial Signs

The New Piconians

Mistrusting Numbers

The Rise of the Theoretical Astronomer and the “Science” of the New Star of 1572

The Generic Location of the New Star

Court Spaces and Networks: Uraniborg, Hapsburg Vienna and Prague

Hagecius’s Polemic on the New Star

An Emergent Role for a Noble Astronomer: Tycho Brahe and the Copenhagen Oration

Tycho and Pico, Generic and Named Adversaries

The Tychonian Problematic, 1574

A Tychonic Solution to Pico’s Criticism? Naibod’s Circumsolar Ordering of Mercury and Venus

The Comet of 1577 and its Discursive Space

Astrological and Eschatological Meanings of Comets

The Language, Syntax, and Credibility of Cometary Observation

Place and Order, the Comet and the Cosmos: Gemma, Roeslin, Maestlin, and Brahe

Conclusion

9. The Second-Generation Copernicans: Maestlin And Digges

Michael Maestlin: Pastor, Academic, Mathematicus, Copernican

Maestlin’s Hesitations about Astrology

The Practice of Theorizing: Maestlin’s Glosses on Copernicus

Thomas Digges: Gentleman, Mathematical Practitioner, Platonist, Copernican

Digges on Copernicus in Wings or Ladders

(Re)Classifying the Star

The Mathematicians’ Court

Reorganizing Copernicus

Thomas Digges’s Infinite Universe “Augmentation” in Leonard Digges’s Prognostication Euerlastinge

The Plummet Passage

Conclusion

10. A Proliferation Of Readings

The Emergence of a Via Media

Along the Via Media: Tycho’s Progress

Negotiating the Spheres’ Ontology

Rothmann’s Transformation and the First Copernican Controversy

Giordano Bruno: “Accademico dinulla Accademia detto il Fastidito”

Bruno’s Visual, Pythagorean Reading of Copernicus

Bruno and the Science of the Stars

IV: Securing the Divine Plan

11. The Emergence Of Kepler ’s Copernican Representation

The Copernican Situation at the End of the 1580s

Counterfactual Kepler

Kepler’s Copernican Formation at Tübingen, 1590–1594

Kepler’s Shift in the Astronomer’s Role

Kepler’s Physical-Astrological Problematic and Pico

Dating Kepler’s Encounter with Pico: A Tübingen Scenario?

The Gold Nugget

Prognosticating (and Theorizing) in Graz

Kepler’s Copernican Cosmography and Prognostication

The Divine Plan, Archetypal Causes, and the Beginning of the World

From Kepler’s Polyhedral Hypothesis to the Logical and Astronomical Defense of Copernicus

12. Kepler’s Early Audiences, 1596–1600

The Mysterium Cosmographicum: The Space of Reception

The Tübingen Theologians and the Duke

The German Academic Mathematicians: Limnaeus and Praetorius

Kepler’s Mysterium and the Via Media Group

V: Conflicted Modernizers at the Turn of the Century

13. The Third-Generation Copernicans: Galileo and Kepler

Galileo and the Science of the Stars in the Pisan Period

Galileo and the Wittenberg and Uraniborg-Kassel Networks

Galileo on Copernicus: The Exchange with Mazzoni

Galileo and Kepler: The 1597 Exchange

Galileo as a “Maestlinian”

Paduan Sociabilities: The Pinelli Circle and the Edmund Bruce Episode, 1599–1605

1600: Bruno’s Execution

1600: William Gilbert’s Project for a Magnetical Philosophy

The Quarrel among the Modernizers: New Convergences at the Fin de Siècle

Galileo’s Silence about Bruno

Galileo’s First Run-In with the Inquisition

The Copernican Problematic and Astrological Theorizing after Bruno’s Trial

Kepler’s Continuing Search for Astrology’s Foundations

14. The Naturalist Turn And Celestial Order: Constructing the Nova of 1604

The Predicted Conjunction of the Three Superior Planets and the Unforeseen Nova of 1604

Galileo and the Italian Nova Controversies

Honor and Credibility in the Capra Controversy

Galileo and Kepler’s Nova

Celestial Natural Philosophy in a New Key: Kepler’s De Stella Nova and the Modernizers

The Possibility of a Reformed Astrological Theoric: Kepler for and against Pico (Again)

The Copernican Question in the Stella Nova: Kepler for Gilbert, against Tycho

Making Room: Kepler between Wacker von Wackenfels and Tycho Brahe

Generating the Nova: Divine Action and Material Necessity

Summary and Conclusion

15. How Kepler’s New Star Traveled To England

Kepler’s Star over Germany and Italy

Kepler’s English Campaign

VI: The Modernizers, Recurrent Novelties, and Celestial Order

16. The Struggle For Order

The Emergent Problematic of the Via Moderna

Many Roads for the Modernizers: The Social Disunity of Copernican Natural Philosophy

Along the Via Moderna

Conclusion

17. Modernizing Theoretical Knowledge: Patronage, Reputation, Learned Sociability, Gentlemanly Veracity

Theoretical Knowledge and Scholarly Reputation

Patron-Centered Heavenly Knowledge

Patronage at the Periphery: Galileo and the Aristocratic Sphere of Learned Sociability

Florentine Court Sociabilities

Galileo’s Decision to Leave Padua for Florence

Stabilizing the Telescopic Novelties

Conclusion: Gentlemanly Truth Tellers?

18. How Galileo’s Recurrent Novelties Traveled

The Sidereus Nuncius, the Nova Controversies, and Galileo’s “Copernican Silence”

Through a Macro Lens: The Reception of the Sidereus Nuncius and the Telescope, Mid-March to Early May 1610

Kepler’s Philosophical Conversation with Galileo and His Book

Galileo’s Negotiations with the Tuscan Court, May 1610

Virtual Witnessing, Print, and the Great Resistance

Magini’s Strategic Retreat and the 7/11 Problem

Galileo and Kepler: The Denouement

Scottish Scientific Diplomacy: John Wedderburn’s Confutatio

Galileo’s Novelties and the Jesuits

Conclusion: The Great Controversy

Astrological Prognostication and Astronomical Revolution

Copernicans and Master-Disciple Relations

Seventeenth-Century Thoughts about Belief Change

The End of the Long Sixteenth Century

The Era of Consolidation: World Systems and Comparative Probability

From Philosophizing Astronomer-Astrologers to New-Style Natural Philosophers

Weighing Probables: The Via Moderna versus the Via Media at Midcentury

The Copernican Question after Midcentury

Robert Hooke, Isaac Newton, and the Crucial Experiment

The Copernican Question: Closure and Proof

Notes

Bibliography

Index

A

B

C

D

E

F

G

H

I

J

K

L

M

N

O

P

Q

R

S

T

U

V

W

X

Y

Z

The users who browse this book also browse