Einführung in die Philosophie der Renaissance | ||
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Prev | Vorlesung 13. Literatur |
Boas, Marie. The Scientific Renaissance. London; 1962.
Butterfield, Herbert. The Origins of Modern Science. New York; 1957
Cassirer, Ernst. Das Erkenntnisproblem in der Philosophie und Wissenschaft der neueren Zeit. Hildesheim; 1971
Drake, Stillman. Cause, Experiment, and Science. Chicago; 1981.
Gerl, H. B. Rhetorik als Philosophie: L.Valla. München; 1974.
Randall, John Herman. The Making of the Modern Mind. Cambridge Mass.; 1940.
---. The School of Padua and the Emergence of Modern Science. Padova; 1961.
Rose, P. L. The Italian Renaissance of Mathematics. Genf; 1975.
Rossi, Paolo. Philosophy, Technology and the Arts in the Early Modern Era. N.Y.; 1970.
---.Hermeticism, Rationality, and the Scientific Revolution. Righini-Bonelli, M. L. and Shea, W. R., Ed. Reason, Experiment, and Mysticism in the Scientific Revolution. New York; 1975.
Schmitt, Charles B. Experience and Experiment: A Comparison of Zabarella's View with Galileo's in De Motu. Schmitt, Charles B. Studies in Renaissance Philosophy and Science. London; 1981.
---. Philosophy and Science in Sixteenth-Century Universities: Some Preliminary Comments. Murdoch, J. E. and Sylla, E. D., Ed. The Cultural Context of Medieval Learning. Dordrecht; 1975.
Seigel, J. Rhetoric and Philosophy in Renaissance Humanism. Princeton; 1968.
Strong, Edward W. Procedures and Metaphysics. Berkeley; 1937.
Vickers, Brian. Analogy versus Identity: The Rejection of Occult Symbolism, 1580-1680. Vickers, Brian, Ed. Occult and Scientific Mentalities in the Renaissance. Cambridge; 1984; pp. 95-163.
---. Introduction. Vickers, Brian, Ed. Occult and Scientific Mentalities in the Renaissance. Cambridge; 1984; pp. 1-55.
Wightman, W. P. D. Science and the Renaissance. 2 vols. Edinburgh; 1972.