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Gast: Hans van den Berg, vertaler & natuurkundige. Robert van Altena spreekt met Hans van den Berg over het door hem vertaalde ‘Dialoog over de twee voornaamste wereldsystemen van Galileo Galilei' (Athenæum, Polak & Van Gennep, 2012).* In dit werk van Galilei Galilei (1564-1642) komen wetenschap, geschiedenis, literatuur en zelfs theater samen. In ‘Dialoog' bespreken drie mannen; Salviati, Sagredo en Simplicio verspreid over vier dagen de argumenten voor en tegen de ideeën van Claudius Ptolemæus (90-168) en Nicolaus Copernicus (1473-1543) over de inrichting van het heelal. Volgens het systeem van Ptolemaeus bevindt de Aarde zich in rust en draaien de zon en de overige hemellichamen om de Aarde. Volgens het systeem van Copernicus is de zon het centrum van het heelal en draait de Aarde haar dagelijkse ronde om haar as en haar jaarlijkse ronde om de zon. *Dit gesprek werd voor het eerst uitgezonden op 20 november 2012 SPRINGVOSSEN redactie + presentatie: Robert van Altena contact: springvossen[at]gmail.com www.instagram.com/springvossen www.facebook.com/springvossen www.amsterdamfm.nl/programma/springvossen Afbeelding: heliocentrische kaart naar Copernicus inzichten uit de collecdtie van The British Library
In this week's story, teller Ana Martin Sagredo shares the early days of her second child's life, the unexpected hurdles they experienced, and the decisions they made for their family.
Saints du jour 2024-09-24 Saint Gérard Sagredo by Radio Maria France
En Panoia (hoy Hungría), San Gerardo Sagredo, Obispo de la sede de Morisena (hoy Csanad) y mártir, fue preceptor del hijo del rey San Esteban. En su tiempo, a la muerte del rey, en una persecución de húngaros cristianos murió apedreado cerca del río Danubio en el 1046.
Daniel Mansuy entrevista al destacado académico y premio nacional de Historia, Rafael Sagredo, para hablar sobre su libro 'Alberto Edwards, profeta de la dictadura en Chile'. Descubre los detalles reveladores de esta investigación sobre la evolución del autoritarismo conservador en Chile.
Queda solo una semana para el festival gratuito de Burgos (de nuevo con un gran cartel de heavy metal y hard rock) y ya es tradición nuestra charla con Laura Sagredo (de la asociación metal Castellae) hablando sobre todo lo relativo al festival, cada nueva edición y nuestra importancia, significación y valoración como rockeros y metaleros. De la mano de David Esquitino por parte de Redhardnheavy.com y Unión Media, charlamos abiertamente con Laura Sagredo sobre todo lo relacionado con la nueva edición del festival que nos vuelve a poner en la primera línea desde Burgos y con el heavy metal por bandera. Muy interesante y enriquecedora tanto la charla como el contenido de la misma... Conozcamos mejor el festival de Burgos, a la asociación Metal Castellae y por supuesto al propia Zurbarán Rock.
Isidro Vidal nos invita a la VI EdaulaBLOG.Reglamentación internacional marítima en Avante Toda con Javier Sánchez-Beaskoetxea.Xabier Bañuelos e Iñaki Sagredo nos llevan al Castillo de Aixita.Malpensando en que la gente no saluda en la ciudad.José Miguel Albizu escribe su primera novela: El Latido de los Tres Burgos.Mario García nos explica cómo conducir en invierno.La Maleta de Alex Angulo.Kenari Orbe con mascarillas, péllets y la acusación de Sudáfrica a Israel.Juan Flahn nos cuenta la historia del hombre de Somerton. Notis. Alicia San Juan pincha a Clarence Bekker.....
Isidro Vidal nos invita a la VI EdaulaBLOG.Reglamentación internacional marítima en Avante Toda con Javier Sánchez-Beaskoetxea.Xabier Bañuelos e Iñaki Sagredo nos llevan al Castillo de Aixita.Malpensando en que la gente no saluda en la ciudad.José Miguel Albizu escribe su primera novela: El Latido de los Tres Burgos.Mario García nos explica cómo conducir en invierno.La Maleta de Alex Angulo.Kenari Orbe con mascarillas, péllets y la acusación de Sudáfrica a Israel.Juan Flahn nos cuenta la historia del hombre de Somerton. Notis. Alicia San Juan pincha a Clarence Bekker.....
Julia Juániz, montadora de cine.Hitos de la navegación (1) con Javier Sánchez Beaskoetxea. En el castillo navarro de Guerga con Xabier Bañuelos e Iñaki Sagredo.Malpensando en patriotas incendiarios.En plena 58ª Behobia-San Sebastián.Gustavo Renobales edita "Ornitomania. Intensa Pasión Por Las Aves" de Bernd Brunner.Mario García y la guía para comprar coche. En Retroclásica con Joserra Morejón y José Enrique Elvira.Una preciosa historia de imprenta con Miren Ausin y Elisabeth Pérez.Kenari Orbe con eutanasia y violencia vicaria. Alberdi recuerda a Pau Casals. Notis. Alicia y Alvaro Ruiz....
È online la decima edizione di Vinetia – La Guida ai vini del Veneto, il portale curato da AIS Veneto che ogni anno seleziona le eccellenze enologiche della regione. La guida è stata presentata sabato 4 novembre all'Hotel Ca' Sagredo di Venezia. L'evento ha visto anche l'assegnazione del Premio Fero ai sette Migliori Vini del Veneto, uno per ciascuna categoria: Miglior Spumante Metodo Charmat, Miglior Spumante Metodo Classico, Miglior Vino Bianco, Miglior Vino Rosa, Miglior Vino Rosso, Miglior Vino Rosso da Invecchiamento, Miglior Vino Dolce. Con l'edizione 2024, inoltre, sono stati introdotti due nuovi premi di qualità, conferiti alle etichette più meritevoli da commissioni distinte e composte rispettivamente da giornalisti e ristoratori.
En Panoia (hoy Hungría), San Gerardo Sagredo, Obispo de la sede de Morisena (hoy Csanad) y mártir, fue preceptor del hijo del rey San Esteban. En su tiempo, a la muerte del rey, en una persecución de húngaros cristianos murió apedreado cerca del río Danubio en el 1046.
Nueva entrega de los castillos de Nafarroa. Xabier Bañuelos e Iñaki Sagredo nos presentan una excursión fácil y una visita libre. En Ollaran y a través de Egillor, el acceso a la torre restaurada y a las ruinas de Garaño se realiza en medio de un contexto cultural e histórico de gran riqueza....
The Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems (Dialogo sopra i due massimi sistemi del mondo) is a 1632 Italian-language book by Galileo Galilei comparing the Copernican system with the traditional Ptolemaic system. It was translated into Latin as Systema cosmicum (English: Cosmic System) in 1635 by Matthias Bernegger. The book was dedicated to Galileo's patron, Ferdinando II de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany, who received the first printed copy on February 22, 1632. Download your copy of Galileo's Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems in auidiobook form here https://BrianKeating.com/dialogue Background In the Copernican system, the Earth and other planets orbit the Sun, while in the Ptolemaic system, everything in the Universe circles around the Earth. The Dialogue was published in Florence under a formal license from the Inquisition. In 1633, Galileo was found to be "vehemently suspect of heresy" based on the book, which was then placed on the Index of Forbidden Books, from which it was not removed until 1835 (after the theories it discussed had been permitted in print in 1822). In an action that was not announced at the time, the publication of anything else he had written or ever might write was also banned in Catholic countries. Overview While writing the book, Galileo referred to it as his Dialogue on the Tides, and when the manuscript went to the Inquisition for approval, the title was Dialogue on the Ebb and Flow of the Sea. He was ordered to remove all mention of tides from the title and to change the preface because granting approval to such a title would look like approval of his theory of the tides using the motion of the Earth as proof. As a result, the formal title on the title page is Dialogue, which is followed by Galileo's name, academic posts, and followed by a long subtitle. The name by which the work is now known was extracted by the printer from the description on the title page when permission was given to reprint it with an approved preface by a Catholic theologian in 1744. This must be kept in mind when discussing Galileo's motives for writing the book. Although the book is presented formally as a consideration of both systems (as it needed to be in order to be published at all), there is no question that the Copernican side gets the better of the argument. Structure The book is presented as a series of discussions, over a span of four days, among two philosophers and a layman: Salviati argues for the Copernican position and presents some of Galileo's views directly, calling him the "Academician" in honor of Galileo's membership in the Accademia dei Lincei. He is named after Galileo's friend Filippo Salviati (1582–1614). Sagredo is an intelligent layman who is initially neutral. He is named after Galileo's friend Giovanni Francesco Sagredo (1571–1620). Simplicio, a dedicated follower of Ptolemy and Aristotle, presents the traditional views and the arguments against the Copernican position. He is supposedly named after Simplicius of Cilicia, a sixth-century commentator on Aristotle, but it was suspected the name was a double entendre, as the Italian for "simple" (as in "simple minded") is "semplice".Simplicio is modeled on two contemporary conservative philosophers, Lodovico delle Colombe (1565–1616?), Galileo's opponent, and Cesare Cremonini (1550–1631), a Paduan colleague who had refused to look through the telescope. Colombe was the leader of a group of Florentine opponents of Galileo's, which some of the latter's friends referred to as "the pigeon league". Join PragerU: www.prageru.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Link to bioRxiv paper: http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2022.11.08.515615v1?rss=1 Authors: Lam, I., Ndayisaba, A., Lewis, A. J., Fu, Y., Sagredo, G. T., Zaccagnini, L., Sandoe, J., Sanz, R. L., Vahdatshoar, A., Martin, T. D., Morshed, N., Ichihashi, T., Tripathi, A., Ramalingam, N., Oettgen-Suazo, C., Bartels, T., Schabinger, M., Hallacli, E., Jiang, X., Verma, A., Tea, C., Wang, Z., Hakozaki, H., Yu, X., Hyles, K., Park, C., Theunissen, T. W., Wang, H., Jaenisch, R., Lindquist, S., Stevens, B., Stefanova, N., Wenning, G., Luk, K. C., Sanchez Pernaute, R., Gomez-Esteban, J. C., Felsky, D., Kiyota, Y., Sahni, N., Yi, S. S., Chung, C.-Y., Stahlberg, H., Ferrer, I., Schoneberg, J., Ell Abstract: In neurodegenerative proteinopathies, intracellular inclusions are histopathologically and ultrastructurally heterogeneous but the significance of this heterogeneity is unclear. Patient- derived iPSC models, while promising for disease modeling, do not form analogous inclusions in a reasonable timeframe and suffer from limited tractability and scalability. Here, we developed an iPSC toolbox that utilizes piggyBac-based or targeted transgenes to rapidly induce CNS cells with concomitant expression of misfolding-prone proteins. The system is scalable and amenable to screening and longitudinal tracking at single-cell and single-inclusion resolution. For proof-of- principle, cortical neuron alpha-synuclein inclusionopathy models were engineered to form inclusions spontaneously or through exogenous seeding by alpha-synuclein fibrils. These models recapitulated known fibril- and lipid-rich inclusion subtypes in human brain, shedding light on their formation and consequences. Genetic-modifier and protein-interaction screens identified sequestered proteins in these inclusions, including RhoA, that were deleterious to cells when lost. This new iPSC platform should facilitate biological and drug discovery for neurodegenerative proteinopathies. Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info Podcast created by Paper Player, LLC
Dialogan dos Premios Nacionales. Una interesante conversación con Rafael Sagredo Baeza (Premio Nacional de Historia 2022) para comprender a Chile hoy desde su historia, para orientarse hacia su futuro. 'Tras las Líneas. Conversaciones con Manuel Antonio Garretón' es una propuesta semanal de análisis y divulgación en ciencias sociales, presentado por el Departamento de Sociología de la Universidad de Chile, y con el auspicio del COES (Centro de Estudios de Cohesión y Conflicto Social). Este programa también llega a Ud. gracias al financiamiento del Fondo de Fomento de Medios de Comunicación Social del Gobierno de Chile y del Consejo Regional. Recomendamos revisar y compartir el archivo de 117 conversaciones. Tenemos la seguridad de que encontrarán temas no sólo interesantes o coyunturales sino también de mayor permanencia. Ejes para el análisis sobre las estructuras societales de nuestra época en clave Chilena, Latinoamericana y global.
Welcome to The Saint of the Day Podcast, a service of Good Catholic and The Catholic Company. Today's featured saint is St. Gerard Sagredo. If you like what you heard, share this podcast with someone you know, and make sure to subscribe!
Saints du jour 2022-09-24 Saint Gérard Sagredo, Bienheureuse Colombe Gabriel et Saint Isarn by Radio Maria France
São Geraldo Sagredo - (24/09) - O Santo do Dia - Pe. Alex Nogueira --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/jlio4/message
En Panoia (hoy Hungría), San Gerardo Sagredo, Obispo de la sede de Morisena (hoy Csanad) y mártir, fue preceptor del hijo del rey San Esteban. En su tiempo, a la muerte del rey, en una persecución de húngaros cristianos murió apedreado cerca del río Danubio en el 1046.
Este miércoles compartimos El Primer Café junto a Rafael Sagredo, Juan Luis Ossa, Alfredo Riquelme y Pablo Toro-Blanco; El profesor Rafael Sagredo, Premio Nacional de Historia 2022, dijo que "el miedo al futuro ha sido una constante" en nuestro país, y que -bajo manifestaciones de recelo frente a la incertidumbre- ha estado presente desde la misma época de organización de la República, en las primeras décadas del siglo XIX; El académico Juan Luis Ossa afirmó que "durante el proceso constituyente hubo un desprecio bastante explícito hacia nuestra historia y tradición constitucional". El profesor de la Universidad Adolfo Ibáñez opinó que una de las causas de este fenómeno es que "la interpretación histórica de muchos de los (ex)convencionales es profundamente maniquea, donde hay buenos y malos, donde el Estado Nacional se ve como una sumatoria de despojos". Conduce Cecilia Rovaretti.
It is certainly not unusual to have the origin story of a book founded on overcoming challenges. The author of Soulphoria: A Provocative and Practical Approach to Spirituality, Alessandra Sagredo's, story, however, is quite unique as is the solution arrived at for leading a powerful, fulfilling life connected to all aspects of what is generally accepted to make the human experience, namely on physical, emotional and spiritual levels. She grew up as an adopted, ¼ black bi-sexual female mystic in a household of strict Salvation Army ministers. Leaving Going through divorce and subsequent bankruptcy only to face a walnut sized inoperable tumour growing inside her brain. These are just some of things that have made her who she is today, at the age of 44, completely healthy, free and living a life of bliss. Throughout her life she's lived a dichotomy of two worlds: one of business (as a high level corporate consultant and successful business owner), and one of spiritual explorer, mystic and teacher. Alessandra has been privileged to touch thousands of lives over the years as a recording artist of guided meditations, a public speaker and course and retreat leader. Along the way creating a new system of approaching spirituality in a way that some have called a “paradigm shift”. She now felt it was worth sharing with the world by having this book published. Learn more about Alessandra and Soulphoria at soulphoria.ca. Don't forget to like, share, and follow this podcast! Sounds simple, but it helps others find us and our amazing guests.
Alessandra Sagredohas a fascinating story. She grew up as an adopted, ¼ black bi-sexual female mystic in a household of strict Salvation Army ministers. She left an abusive marriage and went through a divorce and subsequent bankruptcy, only to face a walnut-sized inoperable tumor growing inside her brain. These are just some of the things that have made her who she is today, at the age of 44, completely healthy, free, and living a life of bliss.In this interview, we discuss the amazing system she has developed, called Soulphoria. Soulphoria is a systemic way of releasing trauma, healing and falling in love with yourself.You can find Alessandra at:
The Present Day Wise Woman - Healthy Life Hacks With Jennifer Jefferies
A mystical state of bliss that requires you to open your mind body and soul channels, that is Soulphoria, the new book written by author Alessandra Sagredo. In this episode, Jen interviews Alessandra on Soulphoria and how you can achieve soulphoria in your life.
La historia de dos policías Chilenos que se olvidaron de realizar su trabajo y comenzaron una serie de asesinatos que conmocionó al país, principalmente en Viña del Mar. Jorge Sagredo Pizarro y Carlos Top Collins fueron condenados a la pena de muerte. Su fusilamiento fue el último practicado en Chile. REDES SOCIALES Y PLATAFORMAS https://linktr.ee/Perfilcriminal Producción y narración: Tania Mino Guion: Tania Mino Música: Tomás Hernández
Eric Weinstein and I go for a wide-ranging quarterly catch-up on all sorts of goings-on in our Universe. We'll chat about Elon Musk and Twitter, censorship and control, abortion and leaks, a possible solution to the Fermi Paradox on intelligent aliens, Galileo Galilei, and more! Topics Include: Does Elon Musk have Buyer's Remorse over Twitter? Roe vs Wade and the immorality of leaks Trust in science is at an all-time low. What can we do? Advice to Elon Musk RESOURCES MENTIONED: Previous Videos with Eric Eric Weinstein: UFOs, Portal Podcast Reboot, & 2022 Predictions https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RMS02ueFso0 Eric Weinstein: What is WRONG With The World?!: https://youtu.be/CzbElaoMfjk Get GALILEO'S DIALOGUE ON TWO WORLD SYSTEMS Audiobook https://briankeating.com/dialogue Translated by Stillman Drake. With a Foreward by Albert Einstein. Salviati narrated by Carlo Rovelli, and Sagredo narrated by Brian Keating. Simplicio narrated by Lucio Piccirillo Albert Einstein's Foreward read by Frank Wilczek Translator's preface read by Sylvester James Gates Galileo's Dedication read by Fabiola Gianotti.” My PragerU Book Club episode about the Dialogue Follow me on Twitter https://twitter.com/DrBrianKeating Paywall jumper https://12ft.io/ Fermi Paradox Please join my mailing list for twice-monthly updates on the most important discoveries in science and technology; click here
Patrizia Vitelli, de "foodiario", y Marlén Pérez e Iera Sagredo, dos amigas que llevan cerca de cuatro años alimentando su cuenta de "Hambre de Bilbao", han estado en el programa "Boulevard" de Radio Euskadi....
Eric Weinstein and I go for a wide-ranging quarterly catch-up on all sorts of goings-on in our Universe. We'll chat about Elon Musk and Twitter, censorship and control, abortion and leaks, a possible solution to the Fermi Paradox on intelligent aliens, Galileo Galilei, and more! Topics Include: Does Elon Musk have Buyer's Remorse over Twitter? Roe vs Wade and the immorality of leaks Trust in science is at an all-time low. What can we do? Advice to Elon Musk RESOURCES MENTIONED: Previous Videos with Eric Eric Weinstein: UFOs, Portal Podcast Reboot, & 2022 Predictions https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RMS02ueFso0 Eric Weinstein: What is WRONG With The World?!: https://youtu.be/CzbElaoMfjk Get GALILEO'S DIALOGUE ON TWO WORLD SYSTEMS Audiobook https://briankeating.com/dialogue Translated by Stillman Drake. With a Foreward by Albert Einstein. Salviati narrated by Carlo Rovelli, and Sagredo narrated by Brian Keating. Simplicio narrated by Lucio Piccirillo Albert Einstein's Foreward read by Frank Wilczek Translator's preface read by Sylvester James Gates Galileo's Dedication read by Fabiola Gianotti.” My PragerU Book Club episode about the Dialogue Follow me on Twitter https://twitter.com/DrBrianKeating Paywall jumper https://12ft.io/ Fermi Paradox Please join my mailing list for twice-monthly updates on the most important discoveries in science and technology; click here
A punto de comenzar la 59 edición de la Bienal de Venecia, y como sucede all of the above, se aprestan y empacan en su Alpha Bravo de Tumi todo lo necesario para asistir (y publicarlo en redes ad nauseam). Ya sea solos, en compañía especial o bajo la organización de Liaisons Global Experiences, que incluye estancia en el palazzo del siglo XV Hotel Ca' Sagredo, visitas guiadas con accesos privados, tours et al,es básico asistir.Igualmente, destacado será el We Are Ona–Art Tour, del 16 al 23 de abril, que organiza nuestro cómplice de Círculo Mexicano y que casi simultáneamente tendrá presencia en México, del 4 demayo y hasta el 5 de junio próximo, la chef Ella Aflalo exYima, Marseille. La talentosa Ella seráresponsable de diseñar y preparar el menú de degustación para los comensales que visiten la terraza de Círculo Mexicano en el chef residency program que ha revolucionado la escena gastronómica de la Ciudad de México desde septiembre pasado.
El historiador explora los distintos hitos de la Constitución de 1828, que perduran hasta la actualidad para tomar las decisiones gubernamentales.
Dialogo sopra i due massimi sistemi. Eliocentrismo e geocentrismo. Alcune divagazioni sul giudizio di Lutero sul Copernicanesimo e sul ruolo della tradizione nei cattolici. L'osservazione: il cannocchiale
En Panonia (hoy Hungría), San Gerardo Sagredo, obispo de la sede de Morisena (hoy Csanad) y mártir, fue preceptor del hijo del rey San Esteban. En su tiempo, a la muerte del rey, hubo persecución contra los cristianos y, una sedición de húngaros paganos, el Obispo Gerardo murió apedreado cerca del río Danubio.
Saints du jour 2021-09-24 Saint Gérard Sagredo, Saint Anathlon et Saint Loup de Lyon by Radio Maria France
Recebemos a historiadora Raisa Sagredo para uma conversa sobre a (Des)africanização do Egito Antigo. Leia mais → The post #130 – (Des)Africanização do Egito Antigo, com Raisa Sagredo first appeared on Filosofia Pop.#130 – (Des)Africanização do Egito Antigo, com Raisa Sagredo was first posted on julho 26, 2021 at 2:11 am.©2019 "Filosofia Pop". Use of this feed is for personal non-commercial use only. If you are not reading this article in your feed reader, then the site is guilty of copyright infringement. Please contact me at marcosclopes@gmail.com
Today's woman grew up in an entrepreneurial household. As a child, she often accompanied her father to his refrigeration business – a business full of male migrate workers. As she became a young woman, being a lawyer caught her attention and, even though being an attorney was an option, she found her father's business needed her help so this is where she landed. She made systems efficient and streamlined accounts receivables. And customers and employees came to trust and respect her. Eventually she took over the family business and expanded its offerings growing the top line to a multiple 7 figure revenue stream. Today she continues to grow the company as a sharp business woman in a male dominated industry. It is my pleasure to introduce you to Sarah Sagredo-Hammond.
Entrevista en Hoy por Hoy Tudela con Javier Sagredo, Presidente de Aesclick, sobre la exposición en Tudela de la Batalla de las Navas de Tolosa.
In this week's episode of The Power of Owning Your Career Podcast, Simone interviews Sarah Sagredo Hammond. Sarah is the President of Atlas Electrical, Air Conditioning, Refrigeration & Plumbing Services, Inc. Sarah says we have to learn how to relinquish the driver's seat from time to time so we can take in new nuggets from the people we meet. She shares quite a few resources to up our knowledge along with advice to offer ourselves grace. You don't want to miss this week's episode. Pick up tips for dealing with career road bumps. Connect with Sarah on LinkedIn. Connect with the show on LinkedIn - or Instagram
Na 10 jaar en 400 afleveringen van Springvossen deze maand een selectie uit het programma archief. Deze week: aflevering 73 uitgezonden op 20 november 2012. Robert van Altena spreekt met vertaler & natuurkundige Hans van den Berg over het door hem vertaalde boek van Galileo Galilei: 'Dialoog over de twee voornaamste wereldsystemen' (Athenæum, Polak & Van Gennep, 2012). Het heeft bijna 400 jaar geduurd maar de Dialogo van Galilei Galilei (1564-1642) bestaat nu in een Nederlandse vertaling dankzij Hans van den Berg en zijn uitgever. Het is een boek waarin wetenschap, geschiedenis, literatuur en zelfs theater in samenkomen. In Dialoog. Over de twee voornaamste wereldsystemen bespreken drie personages; Salviati, Sagredo en Simplicio verspreid over vier dagen de argumenten voor en tegen de ideeën van Claudius Ptolemæus (90-168) en Nicolaus Copernicus (1473-1543) over de inrichting van het heelal. Volgens het systeem van Ptolemaeus bevindt de Aarde zich in rust en draaien de zon en de overige hemellichamen om de Aarde. Volgens het systeem van Copernicus is de zon het centrum van het heelal en draait de Aarde haar dagelijkse ronde om haar as en haar jaarlijkse ronde om de zon. In zijn nog altijd zeer aan te raden boek ‘De mechanisering van het wereldbeeld' merkt E.J. Dijksterhuis hier over op: ‘Na een stilstand van circa veertien eeuwen zet zich de onwikkeling van de astronomie te Frauenburg [waar Copernicus werkte] voort op het punt, waarop zij te Alexandria was blijven staan.' In het beschaafde herengesprek van Galileo Galilei wordt er serieus gesproken, gelachen, gespot en behendig gemanoeuvreerd om de regels van de censuur. Er staat veel op het spel. Galilei verkondigt in dit geschrift zijn bevindingen over de theorie van Copernicus. Maar wat bij Copernicus alleen nog theorie is dat kan Galilei ondersteunen met waarneming. Nadat aan het begin van de 17e eeuw in Middelburg de telescooop is uitgevonden verbetert Galilei het instrument zodanig dat hij goede waarnemingen kan doen van bijvoorbeeld de maan. SPRINGVOSSEN redactie + presentatie: Robert van Altena contact: springvossen@gmail.com INSTAGRAM www.instagram.com/springvossen FACEBOOK www.facebook.com/springvossen HOMEPAGE www.amsterdamfm.nl/springvossen Springvossen is een radioprogramma dat ook als podcast is te beluisteren onder AmsterdamFM via o.a. iTunes / Podcasts en Spotify. Afbeelding: 1. Heliocentrische hemelkaart van Copernicus (British Library)
El bonus de la semana: Sagredo y Tapia analizan el futuro de Sergio Jadue. ¿Cómo terminará la historia real de "El Presidente"?
Gran amigo, periodista de Radio Agricultura y ESPN, Pancho Sagredo ha trabajado en varios medios chilenos y ha estado en dos etapas como corresponsal en Europa. También es autor de libros sobre importantes protagonistas del deporte chileno como "El Método Pellegrini", "Sergio Livingstone, su archivo personal" y tiene dos publicaciones sobre las grandes crisis dirigenciales de la ANFP: "La Caída" (sobre las salidas de Harold Mayne-Nicholls y Marcelo Bielsa) y "Juego Sucio" (sobre el fin de la era del Doctor Jadue).
El presupuesto municipal de Paterna se ha replanteado por completo para atender la emergencia provocada por el coronavirus. Los que eran, según el alcalde Juan Antonio Sagredo "los presupuestos más sociales de la historia de Paterna", deben adaptarse para "atender a los más necesitados". Las ayudas económicas individualizadas que aprobó el consistorio han llegado ya a 550 familias, además de los más de 2.000 lotes de productos de primera necesidad que se han entregado entre los más necesitados. Son multitud de iniciativas las que se han puesto en marcha en el municipio como el servicio de atención psicológica o la cesión de la residencia de la carretera de Manises a la conselleria de Sanidad para que pueda funcionar como hospital. En esta entrevista, Sagredo habla de todas ellas y de cómo afrontarán las empresas la salida de esta crisis. El podcast Sagredo: "Los ciudadanos de Paterna deben saber que el Ayuntamiento está a su lado" ha sido publicado en Plaza Radio
Carlos Topp Collins e Jorge José SagredoVinã del Mar, Chile,começo dos anos 80, hoje vou contar para vocês uma das históriasmais enigmáticas que já ocorreram no mundo criminal, o último casode pena de morte do chile. Venha viajar pelo mistério dos psicopatasde Vina Del Mar, em que dois indivíduos protagonizaram o terror paraa população local, eles são Carlos Alberto Topp e Jorge JoséSagredo.Apoie esse programa, só com seu apoio continuaremos no ar. Acesse:https://www.padrim.com.br/horadocrimepodcastou pelo Picpay em @horadocrimepodcastConheça Nossas redes sociais em @horadocrimepodcastFontes Consultadas:Elaterrador caso que conmocionó Chile: los psicópatas de Viña delMar. Disponívelem:https://www.notimerica.com/sociedad/noticia-aterrador-caso-conmociono-chile-psicopatas-vina-mar-20170129071433.html Acessoem 13 de Janeiro de 2020El Caso Completo.Disponível em: http://sicopatasdevina.cl/caso/ Acesso em 13 de Janeiro de 2020Reportaje:Historias ocultas tras el caso de los Psicópatas de Viña del Mar.Disponívelem:https://www.puranoticia.cl/noticias/tendencias/reportaje-historias-ocultas-tras-el-caso-de-los-psicopatas-de-vina-del/2018-02-07/132227.html Acesso em 13 de Janeiro de 2020Laverdad sobre los psicópatas de Viña del Mar. Disponívelem:http://www.chilealerta.cl/2014/04/la-verdad-sobre-los-psicopatas-de-vina.html Acesso em 13 de Janeiro de 2020Lospsicópatas de Viña. Disponívelem:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jm-JnRRT2XU Acesso em 15 de Janeiro de 2020
Every country has its own origin story. Mexico is no different. Just as the United States was born from a war for independence from Great Britain, Mexico, or “New Spain,” also fought and won (sort of), its own war for independence from Spain. This episode explores how Mexican artists Juan O’Gorman and Román Sagredo captured key moments of Mexico's fight for independence. https://www.artesmexut.org/part7
A Natalia Sagredo le encanta conocer personas de distintas nacionalidades en su trabajo como traductora y secretaria bilingüe. Junto a su familia, ha rescatado muchos gatos y perros; uno de ellos es muy generoso ya que siempre les trae diversos regalos, como, por ejemplo, más de 300 calcetines… Además, Natalia pertenece a un grupo llamado Rescate Felino, de Santiago, donde salvan, cuidan y coordinan adopciones de gatos. Ella nos contará sobre una enfermedad que afecta a estos animales en Chile. Ayuda, compra un calendario, adopta en Rescate Felino: rescatefelino.com Facebook: Rescate Felino Chile You Tube: Rescate Felino Santiago
Inaugura el espacio 'Comarca y empresa' de Plaza Radio el alcalde de Paterna, Juan Antonio Sagredo. Con él hablamos de la economía de su ciudad. "Paterna es el enclave industrial más importante de España y uno de los más importantes de Europa. Además está en la Champions League de los polígonos industriales", afirma el alcalde.Respecto a Puerto Mediterráneo, Sagredo destaca que "siempre que el proyecto se adecúe al modelo de ciudad pactado por todos los grupos, ningún partido podrá estar en contra. Todo aquello que signifique inversión y empleo, será bienvenido".El podcast Juan Antonio Sagredo: "La industria en Paterna es la joya de la corona" ha sido publicado en Plaza Radio
Como cada semana, Transiciones vuelve puntual a su cita con el triatlón. Tu podcast semanal de triatlón te trae esta semana toda la actualidad del fin de semana de competiciones. Del Triatlón de Vitoria Gasteiz al Challenge Roth pasando por el Europeo de Ginebra, el Triathlo Festival de Ribadesella, la Copa de Asia de Osaka o los Juegos Panamericanos de Toronto. Además, analizamos brevemente las competiciones que se disputan el próximo fin de semana. Vuelven las Series Mundiales de Hamburgo, una de las citas más espectaculares de la temporada, además del Ironman de Suiza o el Campeonato de Europa de Triatlón Cros, que se disputará en Alemania. Charlamos en profundidad con el vigente campeón del Triatlón de Vitoria Gasteiz en su versión larga distancia. El extremeño Diego Paredes nos habla de la importancia de su victoria, el impacto que ha tenido, y de cómo se vio en carrera compitiendo en una de las pruebas de mayor nombre en España. Como cada programa, repasamos la agenda de la semana de competiciones nacionales, hablamos con Ricard Pérez, nuestro científico deportivo y cerramos el programa con una de esas historias vinculadas al triatlón que emocionan a los oyentes de Transiciones. El protagonista de esta semana, el triatleta Nani López de Sagredo, que superó un cáncer de hígado y es el primer trasplantado hepático en finalizar un triatlón de larga distancia. Todo esto y mucho más en Transiciones, tu podcast de triatlón.
Nick Wilding's new book is brilliant, thoughtful, and an absolute pleasure to read. Galileo's Idol: Gianfrancesco Sagredo and The Politics of Knowledge (University of Chicago Press, 2014) takes an unusual approach to understanding Galileo and his context by focusing its narrative on his closest friend, student, and patron, the Venetian Gianfrancesco Sagredo. Though most readers might be familiar with Sagredo largely as one of the protagonists of Galileo's 1632 Dialogue upon the Two Main Systems of the World, here he takes center stage. In order to bring Sagredo to life and help us understand his significance both for Galileo and for early modern science in context more broadly conceived, Wilding has worked with an impressive range of materials that include poems, paintings, ornamental woodcuts, epistolary hoaxes, intercepted letters, murder case files, and more. After a chapter that reads like a detective story as Wilding tracks down and expertly reads missing portraits of Sagredo, subsequent chapters explore the Venetian's role in major disputes involving the Jesuits, his family's mining interests, his time as treasurer for a fortress and a consul to Syria, and his performance as a "rich, old, slightly batty widow" in the context of a rather hilarious epistolary hoax. We also come to understand Galileo anew, as Wilding pays careful attention to his use of scribal publication to control and disseminate his writing and the relationship between instrument and text in his work. (In one wonderful chapter, Wilding reads woodcuts associated with the Sidereus nuncius in order to reframe how we understand the history of production and publication of this text in the context of transalpine book smuggling.) Along the way, the chapters make significant interventions in the historiography of science, suggesting ways that Sagredo helps us think anew about the use of visual sources, the agency of "intermediaries and go-betweens" in creating their own networks, the importance of understanding the sense of humor of our historical actors, the social nature of early modern authorship, and the need to reassess the historiography of the global scientific network of the Jesuits. There are also some really, horribly, wonderfully bad puns. (Consider yourselves forewarned.) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Nick Wilding's new book is brilliant, thoughtful, and an absolute pleasure to read. Galileo's Idol: Gianfrancesco Sagredo and The Politics of Knowledge (University of Chicago Press, 2014) takes an unusual approach to understanding Galileo and his context by focusing its narrative on his closest friend, student, and patron, the Venetian Gianfrancesco Sagredo. Though most readers might be familiar with Sagredo largely as one of the protagonists of Galileo's 1632 Dialogue upon the Two Main Systems of the World, here he takes center stage. In order to bring Sagredo to life and help us understand his significance both for Galileo and for early modern science in context more broadly conceived, Wilding has worked with an impressive range of materials that include poems, paintings, ornamental woodcuts, epistolary hoaxes, intercepted letters, murder case files, and more. After a chapter that reads like a detective story as Wilding tracks down and expertly reads missing portraits of Sagredo, subsequent chapters explore the Venetian's role in major disputes involving the Jesuits, his family's mining interests, his time as treasurer for a fortress and a consul to Syria, and his performance as a "rich, old, slightly batty widow" in the context of a rather hilarious epistolary hoax. We also come to understand Galileo anew, as Wilding pays careful attention to his use of scribal publication to control and disseminate his writing and the relationship between instrument and text in his work. (In one wonderful chapter, Wilding reads woodcuts associated with the Sidereus nuncius in order to reframe how we understand the history of production and publication of this text in the context of transalpine book smuggling.) Along the way, the chapters make significant interventions in the historiography of science, suggesting ways that Sagredo helps us think anew about the use of visual sources, the agency of "intermediaries and go-betweens" in creating their own networks, the importance of understanding the sense of humor of our historical actors, the social nature of early modern authorship, and the need to reassess the historiography of the global scientific network of the Jesuits. There are also some really, horribly, wonderfully bad puns. (Consider yourselves forewarned.) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Nick Wilding's new book is brilliant, thoughtful, and an absolute pleasure to read. Galileo's Idol: Gianfrancesco Sagredo and The Politics of Knowledge (University of Chicago Press, 2014) takes an unusual approach to understanding Galileo and his context by focusing its narrative on his closest friend, student, and patron, the Venetian Gianfrancesco Sagredo. Though most readers might be familiar with Sagredo largely as one of the protagonists of Galileo's 1632 Dialogue upon the Two Main Systems of the World, here he takes center stage. In order to bring Sagredo to life and help us understand his significance both for Galileo and for early modern science in context more broadly conceived, Wilding has worked with an impressive range of materials that include poems, paintings, ornamental woodcuts, epistolary hoaxes, intercepted letters, murder case files, and more. After a chapter that reads like a detective story as Wilding tracks down and expertly reads missing portraits of Sagredo, subsequent chapters explore the Venetian's role in major disputes involving the Jesuits, his family's mining interests, his time as treasurer for a fortress and a consul to Syria, and his performance as a "rich, old, slightly batty widow" in the context of a rather hilarious epistolary hoax. We also come to understand Galileo anew, as Wilding pays careful attention to his use of scribal publication to control and disseminate his writing and the relationship between instrument and text in his work. (In one wonderful chapter, Wilding reads woodcuts associated with the Sidereus nuncius in order to reframe how we understand the history of production and publication of this text in the context of transalpine book smuggling.) Along the way, the chapters make significant interventions in the historiography of science, suggesting ways that Sagredo helps us think anew about the use of visual sources, the agency of "intermediaries and go-betweens" in creating their own networks, the importance of understanding the sense of humor of our historical actors, the social nature of early modern authorship, and the need to reassess the historiography of the global scientific network of the Jesuits. There are also some really, horribly, wonderfully bad puns. (Consider yourselves forewarned.) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/biography
Nick Wilding's new book is brilliant, thoughtful, and an absolute pleasure to read. Galileo's Idol: Gianfrancesco Sagredo and The Politics of Knowledge (University of Chicago Press, 2014) takes an unusual approach to understanding Galileo and his context by focusing its narrative on his closest friend, student, and patron, the Venetian Gianfrancesco Sagredo. Though most readers might be familiar with Sagredo largely as one of the protagonists of Galileo's 1632 Dialogue upon the Two Main Systems of the World, here he takes center stage. In order to bring Sagredo to life and help us understand his significance both for Galileo and for early modern science in context more broadly conceived, Wilding has worked with an impressive range of materials that include poems, paintings, ornamental woodcuts, epistolary hoaxes, intercepted letters, murder case files, and more. After a chapter that reads like a detective story as Wilding tracks down and expertly reads missing portraits of Sagredo, subsequent chapters explore the Venetian's role in major disputes involving the Jesuits, his family's mining interests, his time as treasurer for a fortress and a consul to Syria, and his performance as a "rich, old, slightly batty widow" in the context of a rather hilarious epistolary hoax. We also come to understand Galileo anew, as Wilding pays careful attention to his use of scribal publication to control and disseminate his writing and the relationship between instrument and text in his work. (In one wonderful chapter, Wilding reads woodcuts associated with the Sidereus nuncius in order to reframe how we understand the history of production and publication of this text in the context of transalpine book smuggling.) Along the way, the chapters make significant interventions in the historiography of science, suggesting ways that Sagredo helps us think anew about the use of visual sources, the agency of "intermediaries and go-betweens" in creating their own networks, the importance of understanding the sense of humor of our historical actors, the social nature of early modern authorship, and the need to reassess the historiography of the global scientific network of the Jesuits. There are also some really, horribly, wonderfully bad puns. (Consider yourselves forewarned.) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/science
Nick Wilding's new book is brilliant, thoughtful, and an absolute pleasure to read. Galileo's Idol: Gianfrancesco Sagredo and The Politics of Knowledge (University of Chicago Press, 2014) takes an unusual approach to understanding Galileo and his context by focusing its narrative on his closest friend, student, and patron, the Venetian Gianfrancesco Sagredo. Though most readers might be familiar with Sagredo largely as one of the protagonists of Galileo's 1632 Dialogue upon the Two Main Systems of the World, here he takes center stage. In order to bring Sagredo to life and help us understand his significance both for Galileo and for early modern science in context more broadly conceived, Wilding has worked with an impressive range of materials that include poems, paintings, ornamental woodcuts, epistolary hoaxes, intercepted letters, murder case files, and more. After a chapter that reads like a detective story as Wilding tracks down and expertly reads missing portraits of Sagredo, subsequent chapters explore the Venetian's role in major disputes involving the Jesuits, his family's mining interests, his time as treasurer for a fortress and a consul to Syria, and his performance as a "rich, old, slightly batty widow" in the context of a rather hilarious epistolary hoax. We also come to understand Galileo anew, as Wilding pays careful attention to his use of scribal publication to control and disseminate his writing and the relationship between instrument and text in his work. (In one wonderful chapter, Wilding reads woodcuts associated with the Sidereus nuncius in order to reframe how we understand the history of production and publication of this text in the context of transalpine book smuggling.) Along the way, the chapters make significant interventions in the historiography of science, suggesting ways that Sagredo helps us think anew about the use of visual sources, the agency of "intermediaries and go-betweens" in creating their own networks, the importance of understanding the sense of humor of our historical actors, the social nature of early modern authorship, and the need to reassess the historiography of the global scientific network of the Jesuits. There are also some really, horribly, wonderfully bad puns. (Consider yourselves forewarned.) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/italian-studies
Nick Wilding's new book is brilliant, thoughtful, and an absolute pleasure to read. Galileo's Idol: Gianfrancesco Sagredo and The Politics of Knowledge (University of Chicago Press, 2014) takes an unusual approach to understanding Galileo and his context by focusing its narrative on his closest friend, student, and patron, the Venetian Gianfrancesco Sagredo. Though most readers might be familiar with Sagredo largely as one of the protagonists of Galileo's 1632 Dialogue upon the Two Main Systems of the World, here he takes center stage. In order to bring Sagredo to life and help us understand his significance both for Galileo and for early modern science in context more broadly conceived, Wilding has worked with an impressive range of materials that include poems, paintings, ornamental woodcuts, epistolary hoaxes, intercepted letters, murder case files, and more. After a chapter that reads like a detective story as Wilding tracks down and expertly reads missing portraits of Sagredo, subsequent chapters explore the Venetian's role in major disputes involving the Jesuits, his family's mining interests, his time as treasurer for a fortress and a consul to Syria, and his performance as a "rich, old, slightly batty widow" in the context of a rather hilarious epistolary hoax. We also come to understand Galileo anew, as Wilding pays careful attention to his use of scribal publication to control and disseminate his writing and the relationship between instrument and text in his work. (In one wonderful chapter, Wilding reads woodcuts associated with the Sidereus nuncius in order to reframe how we understand the history of production and publication of this text in the context of transalpine book smuggling.) Along the way, the chapters make significant interventions in the historiography of science, suggesting ways that Sagredo helps us think anew about the use of visual sources, the agency of "intermediaries and go-betweens" in creating their own networks, the importance of understanding the sense of humor of our historical actors, the social nature of early modern authorship, and the need to reassess the historiography of the global scientific network of the Jesuits. There are also some really, horribly, wonderfully bad puns. (Consider yourselves forewarned.) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/science-technology-and-society
Nick Wilding‘s new book is brilliant, thoughtful, and an absolute pleasure to read. Galileo's Idol: Gianfrancesco Sagredo and The Politics of Knowledge (University of Chicago Press, 2014) takes an unusual approach to understanding Galileo and his context by focusing its narrative on his closest friend, student, and patron, the Venetian Gianfrancesco Sagredo. Though most readers might be familiar with Sagredo largely as one of the protagonists of Galileo's 1632 Dialogue upon the Two Main Systems of the World, here he takes center stage. In order to bring Sagredo to life and help us understand his significance both for Galileo and for early modern science in context more broadly conceived, Wilding has worked with an impressive range of materials that include poems, paintings, ornamental woodcuts, epistolary hoaxes, intercepted letters, murder case files, and more. After a chapter that reads like a detective story as Wilding tracks down and expertly reads missing portraits of Sagredo, subsequent chapters explore the Venetian's role in major disputes involving the Jesuits, his family's mining interests, his time as treasurer for a fortress and a consul to Syria, and his performance as a “rich, old, slightly batty widow” in the context of a rather hilarious epistolary hoax. We also come to understand Galileo anew, as Wilding pays careful attention to his use of scribal publication to control and disseminate his writing and the relationship between instrument and text in his work. (In one wonderful chapter, Wilding reads woodcuts associated with the Sidereus nuncius in order to reframe how we understand the history of production and publication of this text in the context of transalpine book smuggling.) Along the way, the chapters make significant interventions in the historiography of science, suggesting ways that Sagredo helps us think anew about the use of visual sources, the agency of “intermediaries and go-betweens” in creating their own networks, the importance of understanding the sense of humor of our historical actors, the social nature of early modern authorship, and the need to reassess the historiography of the global scientific network of the Jesuits. There are also some really, horribly, wonderfully bad puns. (Consider yourselves forewarned.) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Nick Wilding‘s new book is brilliant, thoughtful, and an absolute pleasure to read. Galileo’s Idol: Gianfrancesco Sagredo and The Politics of Knowledge (University of Chicago Press, 2014) takes an unusual approach to understanding Galileo and his context by focusing its narrative on his closest friend, student, and patron, the Venetian Gianfrancesco Sagredo. Though most readers might be familiar with Sagredo largely as one of the protagonists of Galileo’s 1632 Dialogue upon the Two Main Systems of the World, here he takes center stage. In order to bring Sagredo to life and help us understand his significance both for Galileo and for early modern science in context more broadly conceived, Wilding has worked with an impressive range of materials that include poems, paintings, ornamental woodcuts, epistolary hoaxes, intercepted letters, murder case files, and more. After a chapter that reads like a detective story as Wilding tracks down and expertly reads missing portraits of Sagredo, subsequent chapters explore the Venetian’s role in major disputes involving the Jesuits, his family’s mining interests, his time as treasurer for a fortress and a consul to Syria, and his performance as a “rich, old, slightly batty widow” in the context of a rather hilarious epistolary hoax. We also come to understand Galileo anew, as Wilding pays careful attention to his use of scribal publication to control and disseminate his writing and the relationship between instrument and text in his work. (In one wonderful chapter, Wilding reads woodcuts associated with the Sidereus nuncius in order to reframe how we understand the history of production and publication of this text in the context of transalpine book smuggling.) Along the way, the chapters make significant interventions in the historiography of science, suggesting ways that Sagredo helps us think anew about the use of visual sources, the agency of “intermediaries and go-betweens” in creating their own networks, the importance of understanding the sense of humor of our historical actors, the social nature of early modern authorship, and the need to reassess the historiography of the global scientific network of the Jesuits. There are also some really, horribly, wonderfully bad puns. (Consider yourselves forewarned.) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Nick Wilding‘s new book is brilliant, thoughtful, and an absolute pleasure to read. Galileo’s Idol: Gianfrancesco Sagredo and The Politics of Knowledge (University of Chicago Press, 2014) takes an unusual approach to understanding Galileo and his context by focusing its narrative on his closest friend, student, and patron, the Venetian Gianfrancesco Sagredo. Though most readers might be familiar with Sagredo largely as one of the protagonists of Galileo’s 1632 Dialogue upon the Two Main Systems of the World, here he takes center stage. In order to bring Sagredo to life and help us understand his significance both for Galileo and for early modern science in context more broadly conceived, Wilding has worked with an impressive range of materials that include poems, paintings, ornamental woodcuts, epistolary hoaxes, intercepted letters, murder case files, and more. After a chapter that reads like a detective story as Wilding tracks down and expertly reads missing portraits of Sagredo, subsequent chapters explore the Venetian’s role in major disputes involving the Jesuits, his family’s mining interests, his time as treasurer for a fortress and a consul to Syria, and his performance as a “rich, old, slightly batty widow” in the context of a rather hilarious epistolary hoax. We also come to understand Galileo anew, as Wilding pays careful attention to his use of scribal publication to control and disseminate his writing and the relationship between instrument and text in his work. (In one wonderful chapter, Wilding reads woodcuts associated with the Sidereus nuncius in order to reframe how we understand the history of production and publication of this text in the context of transalpine book smuggling.) Along the way, the chapters make significant interventions in the historiography of science, suggesting ways that Sagredo helps us think anew about the use of visual sources, the agency of “intermediaries and go-betweens” in creating their own networks, the importance of understanding the sense of humor of our historical actors, the social nature of early modern authorship, and the need to reassess the historiography of the global scientific network of the Jesuits. There are also some really, horribly, wonderfully bad puns. (Consider yourselves forewarned.) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Nick Wilding‘s new book is brilliant, thoughtful, and an absolute pleasure to read. Galileo’s Idol: Gianfrancesco Sagredo and The Politics of Knowledge (University of Chicago Press, 2014) takes an unusual approach to understanding Galileo and his context by focusing its narrative on his closest friend, student, and patron, the Venetian Gianfrancesco Sagredo. Though most readers might be familiar with Sagredo largely as one of the protagonists of Galileo’s 1632 Dialogue upon the Two Main Systems of the World, here he takes center stage. In order to bring Sagredo to life and help us understand his significance both for Galileo and for early modern science in context more broadly conceived, Wilding has worked with an impressive range of materials that include poems, paintings, ornamental woodcuts, epistolary hoaxes, intercepted letters, murder case files, and more. After a chapter that reads like a detective story as Wilding tracks down and expertly reads missing portraits of Sagredo, subsequent chapters explore the Venetian’s role in major disputes involving the Jesuits, his family’s mining interests, his time as treasurer for a fortress and a consul to Syria, and his performance as a “rich, old, slightly batty widow” in the context of a rather hilarious epistolary hoax. We also come to understand Galileo anew, as Wilding pays careful attention to his use of scribal publication to control and disseminate his writing and the relationship between instrument and text in his work. (In one wonderful chapter, Wilding reads woodcuts associated with the Sidereus nuncius in order to reframe how we understand the history of production and publication of this text in the context of transalpine book smuggling.) Along the way, the chapters make significant interventions in the historiography of science, suggesting ways that Sagredo helps us think anew about the use of visual sources, the agency of “intermediaries and go-betweens” in creating their own networks, the importance of understanding the sense of humor of our historical actors, the social nature of early modern authorship, and the need to reassess the historiography of the global scientific network of the Jesuits. There are also some really, horribly, wonderfully bad puns. (Consider yourselves forewarned.) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Nick Wilding‘s new book is brilliant, thoughtful, and an absolute pleasure to read. Galileo’s Idol: Gianfrancesco Sagredo and The Politics of Knowledge (University of Chicago Press, 2014) takes an unusual approach to understanding Galileo and his context by focusing its narrative on his closest friend, student, and patron, the Venetian Gianfrancesco Sagredo. Though most readers might be familiar with Sagredo largely as one of the protagonists of Galileo’s 1632 Dialogue upon the Two Main Systems of the World, here he takes center stage. In order to bring Sagredo to life and help us understand his significance both for Galileo and for early modern science in context more broadly conceived, Wilding has worked with an impressive range of materials that include poems, paintings, ornamental woodcuts, epistolary hoaxes, intercepted letters, murder case files, and more. After a chapter that reads like a detective story as Wilding tracks down and expertly reads missing portraits of Sagredo, subsequent chapters explore the Venetian’s role in major disputes involving the Jesuits, his family’s mining interests, his time as treasurer for a fortress and a consul to Syria, and his performance as a “rich, old, slightly batty widow” in the context of a rather hilarious epistolary hoax. We also come to understand Galileo anew, as Wilding pays careful attention to his use of scribal publication to control and disseminate his writing and the relationship between instrument and text in his work. (In one wonderful chapter, Wilding reads woodcuts associated with the Sidereus nuncius in order to reframe how we understand the history of production and publication of this text in the context of transalpine book smuggling.) Along the way, the chapters make significant interventions in the historiography of science, suggesting ways that Sagredo helps us think anew about the use of visual sources, the agency of “intermediaries and go-betweens” in creating their own networks, the importance of understanding the sense of humor of our historical actors, the social nature of early modern authorship, and the need to reassess the historiography of the global scientific network of the Jesuits. There are also some really, horribly, wonderfully bad puns. (Consider yourselves forewarned.) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Nick Wilding‘s new book is brilliant, thoughtful, and an absolute pleasure to read. Galileo’s Idol: Gianfrancesco Sagredo and The Politics of Knowledge (University of Chicago Press, 2014) takes an unusual approach to understanding Galileo and his context by focusing its narrative on his closest friend, student, and patron, the Venetian Gianfrancesco Sagredo. Though most readers might be familiar with Sagredo largely as one of the protagonists of Galileo’s 1632 Dialogue upon the Two Main Systems of the World, here he takes center stage. In order to bring Sagredo to life and help us understand his significance both for Galileo and for early modern science in context more broadly conceived, Wilding has worked with an impressive range of materials that include poems, paintings, ornamental woodcuts, epistolary hoaxes, intercepted letters, murder case files, and more. After a chapter that reads like a detective story as Wilding tracks down and expertly reads missing portraits of Sagredo, subsequent chapters explore the Venetian’s role in major disputes involving the Jesuits, his family’s mining interests, his time as treasurer for a fortress and a consul to Syria, and his performance as a “rich, old, slightly batty widow” in the context of a rather hilarious epistolary hoax. We also come to understand Galileo anew, as Wilding pays careful attention to his use of scribal publication to control and disseminate his writing and the relationship between instrument and text in his work. (In one wonderful chapter, Wilding reads woodcuts associated with the Sidereus nuncius in order to reframe how we understand the history of production and publication of this text in the context of transalpine book smuggling.) Along the way, the chapters make significant interventions in the historiography of science, suggesting ways that Sagredo helps us think anew about the use of visual sources, the agency of “intermediaries and go-betweens” in creating their own networks, the importance of understanding the sense of humor of our historical actors, the social nature of early modern authorship, and the need to reassess the historiography of the global scientific network of the Jesuits. There are also some really, horribly, wonderfully bad puns. (Consider yourselves forewarned.) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices