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A ground-breaking study of the astronomical culture of
sixteenth-century Europe. It examines, in particular, the ways in
which members of the nascent international astronomical community
shared information, attracted patronage and respect for their work,
and conducted their disputes. Particular attention is paid to the
Danish astronomer Tycho Brahe (1546???1601), known for his
observatory Uraniborg on the island of Hven, his operation of a
printing press, and his development of a third world-system to
rival those of Ptolemy and Copernicus. Adam Mosley examines the
ways in which Tycho interacted with a Europe-wide network of
scholars, looking not only at how he constructed his reputation
through print, but also his use of correspondence and the role that
instruments played as vehicles for data and theories. The book will
be of interest to historians of science, historians of the book,
and historians of early modern culture in general.
This book is a study of the astronomical culture of
sixteenth-century Europe. It examines, in particular, the ways in
which members of the nascent international astronomical community
shared information, attracted patronage and respect for their work,
and conducted their disputes. Particular attention is paid to the
Danish astronomer Tycho Brahe (1546-1601), known for his
observatory Uraniborg on the island of Hven, his operation of a
printing press, and his development of a third world-system to
rival those of Ptolemy and Copernicus. Adam Mosley examines the
ways in which Tycho interacted with a Europe-wide network of
scholars, looking not only at how he constructed his reputation
through print, but also at his use of correspondence and the role
that instruments played as vehicles for data and theories. The book
will be of interest to historians of science, historians of the
book, and historians of early modern culture in general.
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