The language of nature: reassessing the mathematization of natural philosophy in the seventeenth century
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Publication:5266525
zbMATH Open1367.00018MaRDI QIDQ5266525FDOQ5266525
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Publication date: 7 June 2017
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Cited In (15)
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- Natural philosophy and geometry in the 17th century
- Language, science and philosophy in the XIIth century. Papers from the international roundtable, Paris, France, March 25--26, 1998
- The ‘Mathematization of Nature’: The Making of a Concept, and How It Has Fared in Later Years
- The experimentalist as humanist: Robert Boyle on the history of philosophy
- The uses and abuses of mathematics in early modern philosophy: introduction
- Changing canons of mathematical and physical intelligibility in the later 17th century
- Vital anti-mathematicism and the ontology of the emerging life sciences: from Mandeville to Diderot
- Definitions \textit{more geometrarum} and Newton's scholium on space and time
- Changing conceptions of mathematics and infinity in Giordano Bruno's vernacular and Latin works
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- Disciplines, knowledge and methods. Natural philosophy, mathematics and astronomy in the modern age Spanish society
- Nature's drawing: problems and resolutions in the mathematization of motion
- Mathematical practitioners and the transformation of natural knowledge in early modern Europe
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