Review
"An important contribution to the problem of the transition from the world view characteristic of the medieval centuries to that which rapidly gained acceptance after the seventeenth century." -- Philosophical Quarterly
"Koyré has provided the material and has illuminated it with uniformly perceptive and occasionally brilliant commentary... An important contribution to the study of 17th-century thought." -- Thomas S. Kuhn, Science
"A model of scholarliness without pedantry, of clarity without oversimplification." -- Arthur Koestler, Encounter
"Surely a work that will be welcomed alike by the scientist, philosopher, and historian of ideas." -- Philosophy and Phenomenological Research
Product Description
During the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries a radical change occurred in the patterns and framework of European thought. In the wake of discoveries through the telescope and Copernican theory, the notion of an ordered cosmos of 'fixed stars' gave way to that of a universe infinite in both time and space - with significant and far-reaching consequences for human thought. Alexandre Koyre interprets this revolution in terms of the change that occurred in our conception of the universe and our place in it and shows the primacy of this change in the development of the modern world.
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