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Theoretical Knowledge and Scholarly Reputation Theoretical Knowledge and Scholarly Reputation
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Patron-Centered Heavenly Knowledge Patron-Centered Heavenly Knowledge
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Patronage at the Periphery Patronage at the Periphery
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Galileo and the Aristocratic Sphere of Learned Sociability Galileo and the Aristocratic Sphere of Learned Sociability
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Florentine Court Sociabilities Florentine Court Sociabilities
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Galileo's Decision to Leave Padua for Florence Galileo's Decision to Leave Padua for Florence
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Stabilizing the Telescopic Novelties Stabilizing the Telescopic Novelties
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Conclusion:Gentlemanly Truth Tellers? Conclusion:Gentlemanly Truth Tellers?
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17 Modernizing Theoretical Knowledge: Patronage, Reputation, Learned Sociability, Gentlemanly Veracity
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Published:July 2011
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Abstract
The Copernican question is a subset of a larger problem: How did modernizers win credibility for new theoretical knowledge? This chapter examines some recent, alternative proposals, with special focus on Galileo. There are two central issues. One concerns the nature and centrality of patronage as a kind of early modern sociability, the other the degree to which court sociabilities or aristocratic status in some way gave legitimacy to conditions of belief. The chapter first discusses theoretical knowledge and scholarly reputation of celestial practitioners, then describes patron-centered heavenly knowledge. It also looks at Galileo and the aristocratic sphere of learned sociability, sociabilities in the Medici court in Florence, Galileo's decision to leave Padua for Florence, his detection of novel appearances using the telescope, and the reactions of Raffaelo Gualterotti and Giovanni Battista Manso to Galileo's discoveries.
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