Michael Maestlin's manuscript treatise on the comet of 1618 : : an edition and translation of Manuscript WLB Stuttgart, Cod. Math. 4 15b, Nr. 8 / / edited by Miguel A. Granada, Patrick J. Boner.

Michael Maestlin (1550-1631), professor of mathematics at the University of Tübingen, was a leading protagonist of the astronomical and cosmological revolution that began with Copernicus. Famous for first introducing Copernicanism to Kepler, Maestlin also wrote important treatises on the supernova o...

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Medieval and early modern philosophy and science ; Volume 33
TeilnehmendeR:
Place / Publishing House:Leiden ;, Boston : : Brill,, [2022]
©2022
Year of Publication:2022
Language:English
German
Series:History of science and medicine library. Medieval and early modern philosophy and science ; Volume 33.
Physical Description:1 online resource (230 pages)
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Table of Contents:
  • Preface
  • List of Figures
  • Symbols of Planets and Zodiacal Signs: Criteria of This Edition
  • Introduction / Miguel Á. Granada
  • 1 The impact of the Comet of 1618 in Europe and Württemberg
  • 2 Maestlin's Treatise on the Comet of 1618
  • 3 The Comets of 1618-1619 and Maestlin's Observations
  • 4 The Treatises of 1578 and 1580: A Mathematical and Astronomical Approach
  • 5 From 1578 to 1618
  • 6 Bartholomaeus Keckermann and His Assault on Celestial Comets
  • 7 Maestlin's Reply to Keckermann and the Partial Preservation of Aristotle
  • 8 Sunspots and the Telescope Appear on the Scene
  • 9 Maestlin, Schickard and Habrecht on Faulhaber and the Rosicrucians / Michael Maestlin, Astronomischer Discurs von dem Cometen, so in Anno 1618, im Nouembri zu erscheinen angefangen und bis inn Februar dis 1619 Jars am Himmel noch gesehen wirt
  • Critical edition by Miguel Á. Granada
  • Michael Maestlin, Astronomical Discourse on the Comet that First Appeared in November 1618 and Can Still Be Seen in the Sky in February of this Year 1619 / Translation by Patrick J. Boner, notes by Miguel Á. Granada and Patrick J. Boner
  • Chapter 1. More Than One Comet Appeared in the Previous Year 1618
  • Chapter 2. On the First Emergence and Appearance of This Comet
  • Chapter 3. On the Course of This Comet, and the Signs and Constellations through Which It Passed
  • Chapter 4. That the Philosophers Are Divided in Opinion over Whether Comets Are Elementary or Ethereal, That Is, Whether They Are Generated and Brought into Being Here Below in the Air or High above in the Heavens
  • Chapter 5. Whether and How We May Find a Solution for the Two Opposing Opinions
  • Chapter 6. Whether Our Present Comet Possessed Any Sensible Parallax or Not, and How Far Away It May Have Been from the Earth
  • Chapter 7. That before This Time Many Other Comets Appeared and Were Observed Not in the Air, but in the Upper Heaven
  • Chapter 8. What Aristotle and Other Philosophers Might Have Been Missing That Led Them to Think About Comets the Wrong Way
  • Chapter 9. Several Questions Concerning Comets in General, and What Follows from Them
  • Appendix 1. Can Comets Be Predicted?
  • Appendix 2. Draft of a Letter to Duke Johann Friedrich to Apologize for the Delay in Presenting the Requested Report
  • Bibliography
  • Index of Biblical Passages
  • Index of Names.