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A History of Science, Volume 2, by Henry Smith Williams
Scanned by Charles Keller with OmniPage Professional OCR software
A HISTORY OF SCIENCE BY HENRY SMITH WILLIAMS, M.D., LL.D. ASSISTED BY EDWARD H. WILLIAMS, M.D.
IN FIVE VOLUMES VOLUME II.
CONTENTS
BOOK II
CHAPTER I
. SCIENCE IN THE DARK AGE
CHAPTER II
. MEDIAEVAL SCIENCE AMONG THE ARABIANS
CHAPTER III
. MEDIAEVAL SCIENCE IN THE WEST
CHAPTER IV
. THE NEW COSMOLOGY--COPERNICUS TO KEPLER AND GALILEO
CHAPTER V
. GALILEO AND THE NEW PHYSICS
CHAPTER VI
. TWO PSEUDO-SCIENCES--ALCHEMY AND ASTROLOGY
CHAPTER VII
. FROM PARACELSUS TO HARVEY
CHAPTER VIII
. MEDICINE IN THE SIXTEENTH AND SEVENTEENTH CENTURIES
CHAPTER IX
. PHILOSOPHER-SCIENTISTS AND NEW INSTITUTIONS OF LEARNING
CHAPTER X
. THE SUCCESSORS OF GALILEO IN PHYSICAL SCIENCE
CHAPTER XI
. NEWTON AND THE COMPOSITION OF LIGHT
CHAPTER XII
. NEWTON AND THE LAW OF GRAVITATION
CHAPTER XIII
. INSTRUMENTS OF PRECISION IN THE AGE OF NEWTON
CHAPTER XIV
. PROGRESS IN ELECTRICITY FROM GILBERT AND VON GUERICKE TO FRANKLIN
CHAPTER XV
. NATURAL HISTORY TO THE TIME OF LINNAEUS
APPENDIX
A HISTORY OF SCIENCE
BOOK II
THE BEGINNINGS OF MODERN SCIENCE
The studies of the present book cover the progress of science from the close of the Roman period in the fifth century A.D. to about the middle of the eighteenth century. In tracing the course of events through so long a period, a difficulty becomes prominent which everywhere besets the historian in less degree--a difficulty due to the conflict between the strictly chronological and the topical method of treatment. We must hold as closely as possible to the actual sequence of events, since, as already pointed out, one discovery leads on to another. But, on the other hand, progressive steps are taken contemporaneously in the various fields of science, and if we were to attempt to introduce these in strict chronological order we should lose all sense of topical continuity.
Our method has been to adopt a compromise, following the course of a single science in each great epoch to a convenient stopping-point, and then turning back to bring forward the story of another science. Thus, for example, we tell the story of Copernicus and Galileo, bringing the record of cosmical and mechanical progress down to about the middle of the seventeenth century, before turning back to take up the physiological progress of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. Once the latter stream is entered, however, we follow it without interruption to the time of Harvey and his contemporaries in the middle of the seventeenth century, where we leave it to return to the field of mechanics as exploited by the successors of Galileo, who were also the predecessors and contemporaries of Newton.
In general, it will aid the reader to recall that, so far as possible, we hold always to the same sequences of topical treatment of contemporary events; as a rule we treat first the cosmical, then the physical, then the biological sciences. The same order of treatment will be held to in succeeding volumes.
Several of the very greatest of scientific generalizations are developed in the period covered by the present book: for example, the Copernican theory of the solar system, the true doctrine of planetary motions, the laws of motion, the theory of the circulation of the blood, and the Newtonian theory of gravitation. The labors of the investigators of the early decades of the eighteenth century, terminating
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