TY - BOOK
T1 - Mapping the Universe
T2 - Robert Grosseteste's De sphera 'On the Sphere'
AU - Sønnesyn, Sigbjørn Olsen
AU - Gasper, Giles
AU - McLeish, Tom
AU - Smithson, Hannah
AU - Panti, Cecilia
AU - Tanner, Brian
AU - Siviour, C. R.
AU - Cleaver, Laura
AU - Nothaft, C. Philipp
AU - El-Bizri, Nader
AU - Gilbert, Sarah
AU - Seb, Falk
AU - Cunningham, Jack P.
AU - Thomson, David
AU - Lawrence-Mathers, Anne
AU - Griffin, Sarah
AU - Smith, Jack
AU - Taylor, Rosie
PY - 2023/5/12
Y1 - 2023/5/12
N2 - Mapping the Universe presents a multi-disciplinary and multi-author exploration of Robert Grosseteste's treatise On the Sphere. Composed probably in the second decade of the thirteenth century, On the Sphere is part of a series of works on natural phenomena Grosseteste wrote between c.1195 and c.1230. In this work the focus is on astronomy and geometry. Grosseteste moves through issues on the sphericity of the Earth, the movements of celestial bodies, especially the Sun and Moon (including their eclipses), how Earth's climate is affected by these bodies, and how time and the seasons are measured. Drawing on a wide range of sources from the ancient world translated into Latin from Greek and Arabic, Grosseteste's On the Sphere is based, fundamentally, on a discussion of not just how astronomy operates but why. Aristotle and Euclid are the principal framework for his reasoning and presentation. This volume includes an English translation of the treatise, an online celestial model to consult alongside the text, commentary on its striking aspects such as precession and epicycles, discussion of the historical and intellectual context including Grosseteste's concurrent interests in pastoral care, and its illuminated versions. Presented by a team of medievalists and modern scientists, the volume uses this multi-disciplinary methodology to elucidate the treatise and showcase its originality.
AB - Mapping the Universe presents a multi-disciplinary and multi-author exploration of Robert Grosseteste's treatise On the Sphere. Composed probably in the second decade of the thirteenth century, On the Sphere is part of a series of works on natural phenomena Grosseteste wrote between c.1195 and c.1230. In this work the focus is on astronomy and geometry. Grosseteste moves through issues on the sphericity of the Earth, the movements of celestial bodies, especially the Sun and Moon (including their eclipses), how Earth's climate is affected by these bodies, and how time and the seasons are measured. Drawing on a wide range of sources from the ancient world translated into Latin from Greek and Arabic, Grosseteste's On the Sphere is based, fundamentally, on a discussion of not just how astronomy operates but why. Aristotle and Euclid are the principal framework for his reasoning and presentation. This volume includes an English translation of the treatise, an online celestial model to consult alongside the text, commentary on its striking aspects such as precession and epicycles, discussion of the historical and intellectual context including Grosseteste's concurrent interests in pastoral care, and its illuminated versions. Presented by a team of medievalists and modern scientists, the volume uses this multi-disciplinary methodology to elucidate the treatise and showcase its originality.
KW - History of science
KW - History of Philosophy
KW - History of Astronomy
KW - Classics
M3 - Authored book
SN - 9780198805526
T3 - The Scientific Works of Robert Grosseteste
BT - Mapping the Universe
PB - Oxford University Press
CY - Oxford
ER -