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The Fellowship: Gilbert, Bacon, Harvey, Wren, Newton, and the Story of a Scentific Revolution (2005)

door John Gribbin

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John Gribbin, bestselling author of In Search of Schrodinger's Cat, explores the defining decades of the seventeenth century's scientific revolution, when the Royal Society established what became the' scientific method, a way of doing and communicating science that set the tone for the three and a half centuries that followed. In The Fellowship he describes the origins of the Royal Society, which grew out of meetings held in Oxford during the Civil War, and latterly in London, among natural philosophers', especially through the efforts of three men: William Gilbert, Francis Bacon, and William Harvey. The extraordinary return in 1759 of a comet that, on the basis of Newton's theory of gravity, had been predicted by Edmond Halley, marked the triumph of this scientific revolution.… (meer)
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The Fellowship refers to the Royal Society (English science group) from the first ideas about scientific investigation to the society's healthy position some 100 years later. The professional biographies and where possible personal biographies of the key players are presented in an accessible and interesting manner. ( )
  snash | Jun 6, 2019 |
This would be the book Stephenson could have written instead of the execerable Silver Age series, if only he was able to write good non-fiction. Fascinating, well-written look at the early development of science in the West. ( )
1 stem hroethgar | Apr 1, 2012 |
Gribbin’s devotion to all things scientific makes him the perfect person to write about the early days of the scientific revolution and the Royal Society, England’s premier scientific society (and still in existence today). The Society was founded in November 1660 as a group of 12 natural philosophers with the aim of creating experiments which would allow them to understand the laws of nature and the universe without bias from religion or previous suppositions. Gribbin’s history narrates the lives of some two dozen scientists and thinkers of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. While it seems a little heavy on biographical detail at times, the various threads to come together to give a very good picture of the creation of the scientific method. A decent start for those looking background on the history of science. ( )
  NielsenGW | Jun 18, 2010 |
Very interesting history of the establishment of the Royal Society. Well written and entertaining. ( )
  jcaister | Jan 22, 2010 |
Maybe I am being a little picky because this period of history is one of my favorites. I like reading about science & history, but am usually bored by biography, and for my tastes there was too much biography. The parts where the science & the conflict with the orthodoxy were discussed were very good, but the parts where the lives of the scientists were discussed really drug for me. Restoration England basically gave birth to science and the modern world, and the Royal Society was at the heart of it. Gribbon does a nice job of quickly summarizing the influences that made this possible, but then gets bogged down a bit. I'd recommend Carl Zimmer's amazing "Soul Made Flesh" for those interested in this topic. Although Zimmer's book doesn't cover the actual Royal Society foundation so much, it does tell the heart of the story(how folks went from believing that THINKING about things was the right way to figure out how they worked, to realizing that OBSERVING them was far superior).

Of course for people who can't get enough of Restoration England and the foundation of modern thought, this book is still worthwhile.
  jlbrownn23 | Dec 2, 2007 |
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Men are deplorably ignorant with respect to natural things, and modern philosophers, as though dreaming in the darkness, must be aroused and taught the uses of things, the dealing with things; they must be able to quit the sort of learning that comes only from books, and that rests only on vain arguments from probability and upon conjectures...
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Wednesday, 28 November 1660
It is just six months since Charles II landed at Dover en route to London, summoned by Parliament to take the crown which had once adorned the head of his father.
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John Gribbin, bestselling author of In Search of Schrodinger's Cat, explores the defining decades of the seventeenth century's scientific revolution, when the Royal Society established what became the' scientific method, a way of doing and communicating science that set the tone for the three and a half centuries that followed. In The Fellowship he describes the origins of the Royal Society, which grew out of meetings held in Oxford during the Civil War, and latterly in London, among natural philosophers', especially through the efforts of three men: William Gilbert, Francis Bacon, and William Harvey. The extraordinary return in 1759 of a comet that, on the basis of Newton's theory of gravity, had been predicted by Edmond Halley, marked the triumph of this scientific revolution.

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