Lecture IX
Resource tools
File information | File size | Options |
Original JPG File1560 × 2149 pixels (3.35 MP) 13.2 cm × 18.2 cm @ 300 PPI | 547 KB | Download |
Low resolution print1452 × 2000 pixels (2.9 MP) 12.3 cm × 16.9 cm @ 300 PPI | 963 KB | Download |
Screen581 × 800 pixels (0.46 MP) 4.9 cm × 6.8 cm @ 300 PPI | 187 KB | Download |
PreviewScreen Preview | 187 KB | View |
Resource ID
38955
Access
Open
Contributed by
Frederik Wellmann
type of material
A. MS.
description
Lecture IX of the Lowell Institute Lectures of 1892-93. Survey of the post-Hellenic period. The failure of the Arabs to make any contribution. Semitic imagination regarded as passionate and poetical but requiring restraint in order to make scientific contributions. The beginnings of modern western science. Scientific activity is arrested by the discovery of Aristotle's nonlogical writings and the subsequent conviction that the study of Aristotle was essential to salvation. The rise of the universities. The thirteenth-century manuscript of Petrus Peregrinus (CSP claims he was the first to translate all of it).
general index
Aristotle, Peregrinus Petrus manuscript of, history of see also Astronomy history of Mathematics history of, Translations CSP's, history of Universe
pagination
pp. 1-58, with a variant p. 14.
Date
1892~
number
MS1280_008
abbreviated title
-
date (Robin)
c. 1892