
Contents
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The Emergent Problematic of the via Moderna The Emergent Problematic of the via Moderna
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Many Roads for the Modernizers Many Roads for the Modernizers
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The Social Disunity of Copernican Natural Philosophy The Social Disunity of Copernican Natural Philosophy
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Along the via Moderna Along the via Moderna
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Simon Stevin Simon Stevin
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Kepler's Radical Turn in Planetary Theory and the Elimination of Alternatives Kepler's Radical Turn in Planetary Theory and the Elimination of Alternatives
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Cite
Abstract
For the celestial modernizers of the early seventeenth century, the problems that had been emerging since the 1570s began to show signs of consensus: recurrent events (planets), the subject of the science of the stars, and non-recurrent events (comets and new stars) somehow seemed to belong together in the realm of ordinary rather than extraordinary phenomena. Galileo's discoveries at the end of the first decade would further reinforce the sense that the heavens contained recurrent phenomena, marvels that, even if hidden, were still part of the natural order. If prognosticators assumed the Copernican ordering in order to solve the problems of comets and novas, they were confronted with the further question of how that arrangement would be compatible with a heliostatic astrology—unless, yet again, the issue was ignored. This chapter looks at issues concerning celestial order. It discusses the emergent problematic of the via moderna, the social disunity of Copernican natural philosophy, the work of the polymath practitioner Simon Stevin, and Johannes Kepler's radical turn in planetary theory.
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