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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Princeton, N.J : Princeton University Press
    UID:
    gbv_177335163X
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (xvi, 365 pages) , illustrations
    ISBN: 9780691227672 , 0691227675
    Content: Shared culture, separate spaces --Ancient signs --Monsters and the Messiah --Divination --Portents and politics --From natural signs to proximate causes --The decline of cometary divination --Comets, transmutations, and world reform in Newton's thought --Halley's comet theory, Noah's flood, and the end of the world --Refueling the sun and planets --Revolution and evolution within the heavens --Popular culture and elite science --Recent resurgence of cometary catastrophism.
    Content: In a lively investigation into the boundaries between popular culture and early-modern science, Sara Schechner Genuth presents a case study that challenges the view that rationalism was at odds with popular belief in the development of scientific theories. Schechner Genuth delineates the evolution of people's understanding of comets, showing that until the seventeenth century, all members of society dreaded comets as heaven-sent portents of plague, flood, civil disorder, and other calamities. Although these beliefs became spurned as "vulgar superstitions" by the elite before the end of the century, she shows that they were nonetheless absorbed into the science of Newton and Halley, contributing to their theories in subtle yet profound ways
    Note: Includes bibliographical references (pages 309-351) and index
    Additional Edition: ISBN 0691011508
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe Schechner, Sara, 1957- Comets, popular culture, and the birth of modern cosmology Princeton, N.J : Princeton University Press, ©1997
    Language: English
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