{"title":"简介:尼古拉斯·斯坦诺与近代意大利早期的地球科学","authors":"S. Dominici, G. D. Rosenberg","doi":"10.36253/substantia-1273","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"A group of scientists interested in history of science and fascinated by the figure of Nicolaus Steno (1638-1686) gathered in Florence for the 350th anniversary of the publication of his De solido intra solidum naturaliter contento prodromus dissertationis. A public conference held at Palazzo Fenzi on 16 October 2019 and a geological fieldtrip on the following day were occasions to discuss different points of view on the last published work of the Danish natural philosopher, dedicated to \"solids naturally enclosed in other solids\" (De solido intra solidum naturaliter contento, or De solido in short). The title of the gathering, \"Galilean foundation for a solid earth\", emphasized the philosophical context that Steno found in Florence, where in 1666-1668 he established tight human and philosophical bonds with renowned Italian disciples of Galileo Galilei and members of the Accademia del Cimento. For participants to the 2019 gathering, the Museum of Natural History of the University of Florence, hosting some of Steno's geological specimens, and the region of Tuscany itself, formed the perfect location to discuss the phenomena that Steno had observed from 1666-1668, the motivations for his research, the methodology of his discovery and, generally stated, the European scientific context which informed his inquiry. Some of the talks given in that meeting are included within this volume, kindly hosted by Substantia, International Journal of the History of Chemistry published by the Florence University Press. In addition some of the invited speakers who were unable to attend, also contributed a paper to this publication. The collection is about earth science in the early modern period, when the study of minerals, rocks, and the fossilized remains of living things did not yet form a distinct path to knowledge about earth history, but was an integral part of the wider \"philosophy of nature\".","PeriodicalId":32750,"journal":{"name":"Substantia","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-06-18","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Introduction: Nicolaus Steno and earth science in early modern Italy\",\"authors\":\"S. Dominici, G. D. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
一群对科学史感兴趣并对尼古拉斯·斯坦诺(1638-1686)的形象着迷的科学家聚集在佛罗伦萨,庆祝他的《团结内部的自然人》发表350周年。2019年10月16日在芬齐宫举行的一次公开会议和第二天的一次地质实地考察,讨论了对这位丹麦自然哲学家最后一部出版的作品的不同观点,该作品致力于“自然包裹在其他固体中的固体”(简称De solido intra-solidum nativeter contento,或De solido)。聚会的标题是“坚实地球的伽利略基础”,强调了斯坦诺在佛罗伦萨发现的哲学背景,1666-1668年,他在佛罗伦萨与伽利略的意大利著名弟子和Cimento学院的成员建立了紧密的人类和哲学联系。对于2019年聚会的参与者来说,佛罗伦萨大学自然历史博物馆(Museum of Natural History of the University of Florence)是讨论斯坦诺在1666-1668年间观察到的现象、他研究的动机、他的发现方法的完美场所,该博物馆收藏了斯坦诺的一些地质标本,托斯卡纳地区本身也是如此,欧洲的科学背景为他的调查提供了依据。会议上的一些演讲包含在本卷中,由佛罗伦萨大学出版社出版的《国际化学史杂志》Substania主办。此外,一些应邀发言但未能出席的发言者也为本出版物撰写了一篇论文。该系列是关于现代早期的地球科学,当时对矿物、岩石和生物化石遗骸的研究还没有形成一条了解地球历史的独特道路,而是更广泛的“自然哲学”的一个组成部分。
Introduction: Nicolaus Steno and earth science in early modern Italy
A group of scientists interested in history of science and fascinated by the figure of Nicolaus Steno (1638-1686) gathered in Florence for the 350th anniversary of the publication of his De solido intra solidum naturaliter contento prodromus dissertationis. A public conference held at Palazzo Fenzi on 16 October 2019 and a geological fieldtrip on the following day were occasions to discuss different points of view on the last published work of the Danish natural philosopher, dedicated to "solids naturally enclosed in other solids" (De solido intra solidum naturaliter contento, or De solido in short). The title of the gathering, "Galilean foundation for a solid earth", emphasized the philosophical context that Steno found in Florence, where in 1666-1668 he established tight human and philosophical bonds with renowned Italian disciples of Galileo Galilei and members of the Accademia del Cimento. For participants to the 2019 gathering, the Museum of Natural History of the University of Florence, hosting some of Steno's geological specimens, and the region of Tuscany itself, formed the perfect location to discuss the phenomena that Steno had observed from 1666-1668, the motivations for his research, the methodology of his discovery and, generally stated, the European scientific context which informed his inquiry. Some of the talks given in that meeting are included within this volume, kindly hosted by Substantia, International Journal of the History of Chemistry published by the Florence University Press. In addition some of the invited speakers who were unable to attend, also contributed a paper to this publication. The collection is about earth science in the early modern period, when the study of minerals, rocks, and the fossilized remains of living things did not yet form a distinct path to knowledge about earth history, but was an integral part of the wider "philosophy of nature".