The Igobello Family
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Author | : Frank Igobello |
Publisher | : Archway Publishing |
Total Pages | : 77 |
Release | : 2020-03-19 |
Genre | : Family & Relationships |
ISBN | : 1480887692 |
I believe people learn best through the experiences of others as well as their own failures and successes. I am a lucky and great man. Why? Because in my lifetime I have traveled the world full of love. I have suffered, and I have worked hard, but most importantly, I have learned to listen—and with that, I have learned various important lessons. In my life, with the help of others around me, I listened to God’s call for me to join him on a journey. This journey is based on faith, love, and trust. Now, it is my turn to tell you my stories, the facts of my life. I promise you will learn more than you have been taught in any history classroom. My knowledge of the American dream and listing my struggles and successes will teach you about making your own dreams come true. You should always be filled with faith, love, and trust.
Author | : Dusan I. Bjelic |
Publisher | : SUNY Press |
Total Pages | : 228 |
Release | : 2003-10-09 |
Genre | : Social Science |
ISBN | : 9780791458822 |
Examines the history of science in light of recent theories of sexuality and the body.
Author | : Mario Biagioli |
Publisher | : University of Chicago Press |
Total Pages | : 417 |
Release | : 2018-12-01 |
Genre | : Science |
ISBN | : 022621897X |
Informed by currents in sociology, cultural anthropology, and literary theory, Galileo, Courtier is neither a biography nor a conventional history of science. In the court of the Medicis and the Vatican, Galileo fashioned both his career and his science to the demands of patronage and its complex systems of wealth, power, and prestige. Biagioli argues that Galileo's courtly role was integral to his science—the questions he chose to examine, his methods, even his conclusions. Galileo, Courtier is a fascinating cultural and social history of science highlighting the workings of power, patronage, and credibility in the development of science.
Author | : Rivka Feldhay |
Publisher | : Cambridge University Press |
Total Pages | : 320 |
Release | : 1995-05-26 |
Genre | : Religion |
ISBN | : 9780521344685 |
This book questions the traditional "grand narratives" of science and religion in the seventeenth-century. The known contradictions between the documents of Galileo's "trials" are reread as expressions of the contradictory nature of the Counter Reformation Church. Looking back at the formative years of Tridentine Catholicism demystifies its monolithic and coercive tendencies. Being torn between different cultural orientationsNthe Dominicans' and the Jesuits'Nthe Church was unable to crystallize a coherent attitude towards Galileo's science.
Author | : Edward Grant |
Publisher | : CUP Archive |
Total Pages | : 852 |
Release | : 1996-07-13 |
Genre | : Science |
ISBN | : 9780521565097 |
Edward Grant describes the extraordinary range of themes, ideas, and arguments that constituted scholastic cosmology for approximately five hundred years, from around 1200 to 1700. Primary emphasis is placed on the world as a whole, what might lie beyond it, and the celestial region, which extended from the Moon to the outermost convex surface of the cosmos.
Author | : Richard J. Blackwell |
Publisher | : University of Notre Dame Pess |
Total Pages | : 246 |
Release | : 1991-01-31 |
Genre | : Religion |
ISBN | : 0268158932 |
Considered the paradigm case of the troubled interaction between science and religion, the conflict between Galileo and the Church continues to generate new research and lively debate. Richard J. Blackwell offers a fresh approach to the Galileo case, using as his primary focus the biblical and ecclesiastical issues that were the battleground for the celebrated confrontation. Blackwell's research in the Vatican manuscript collection and the Jesuit archives in Rome enables him to re-create a vivid picture of the trends and counter-trends that influenced leading Catholic thinkers of the period: the conservative reaction to the Reformation, the role of authority in biblical exegesis and in guarding orthodoxy from the inroads of "unbridled spirits," and the position taken by Cardinal Bellarmine and the Jesuits in attempting to weigh the discoveries of the new science in the context of traditional philosophy and theology. A centerpiece of Blackwell's investigation is his careful reading of the brief treatise Letter on the Motion of the Earth by Paolo Antonio Foscarini, a Carmelite scholar, arguing for the compatibility of the Copernican system with the Bible. Blackwell appends the first modern translation into English of this important and neglected document, which was placed on the Index of Forbidden Books in 1616. Though there were differing and competing theories of biblical interpretation advocated in Galileo's time—the legacy of the Council of Trent, the views of Cardinal Bellarmine, the most influential churchman of his time, and, finally, the claims of authority and obedience that weakened the abillity of Jesuit scientists to support the new science—all contributed to the eventual condemnation of Galileo in 1633. Blackwell argues convincingly that the maintenance of ecclesiastical authority, not the scientific issues themselves, led to that tragic trial.
Author | : David F. Noble |
Publisher | : Knopf |
Total Pages | : 477 |
Release | : 2013-01-23 |
Genre | : Social Science |
ISBN | : 0307828522 |
In this groundbreaking work of history, David Noble examines the origins and implications of the masculine culture of Western science and technology. He begins by asking why women have figure so little in the development of science, and then proceeds—in a fascinating and radical analysis—to trace their absence to a deep-rooted legacy of the male-dominated Western religious community. He shows how over the last thousand years science and the practice and institutions of higher learning were dominated by Christian clerics, whose ascetic culture from the late medieval period militated against the inclusion of women in scientific enterprise. He further demonstrates how the attitudes that took hold then remained more or less intact through the Reformation, and still subtly permeate out thinking despite the secularization of learning. Noble also describes how during the first millennium and after, women at times gained amazingly broad intellectual freedom and participated both in clerical activities and in scholarly pursuits. But, as Noble shows, these episodic forays occurred only in the wake of anticlerical movements within the church and without. He suggest finally an impulse toward “defeminization” at the core of the modern scientific and technological enterprise as it work to wrest from one-half of humanity its part in production (the Industrial Revolution’s male appropriation of labor) and reproduction (the millennium-old quest for the artificial womb). An important book that profoundly examine how the culture of Western Science came to be a world without women.