GALILEO: TITLE PAGE, 1635.
GALILEO: DIALOGO, 1632.
GALILEO GALILEI
PTOLEMY (2nd CENTURY A.D.).
URANIA & ASTRONOMERS, 1660.
PLANETARY SYSTEMS, 1537.
CLAUDIUS PTOLEMAEUS PTOLEMY.
ARMILLARY SPHERE, 1531.
Frontispiece of Galileo's book on cosmology
IN ALMAGESTUM PTOLOMEI.
ARMILLARY SPHERE, 1543.
'Rudolphine Tables' (1627)
ARISTOTLE: TITLE PAGE.
Historical cosmologies, 17th century
GALILEO GALILEI (1564-1642).
Frontispiece to 'Machina Coelestis' (1573) by Hevelius
COPERNICAN UNIVERSE, 1660.
COPERNICAN UNIVERSE
PTOLEMAIC UNIVERSE, 1660.
The Academy at Athens by James Clark
Ptolemy and Euclid, 17th century artwork
Galileo Galilei
GALILEO: SIDEREUS, 1610.
GALILEO: DISCORSI, 1638.
MILTON AND GALILEO, 1638-39.
ELEMENTS OF THE UNIVERSE.
肖像画
Galileo Galilei, Italian astronomer, 19th C illustration
Galileo Galilei's sketch of Saturn.
Roger Bacon
Ptolemy in Alexandria observatory, illustration
Aristotle.
Uranometria title page, 1603
GALILEO: NOTEBOOK, 1610.
GALILEO: SATELLITES, 1610.
PTOLEMAIC UNIVERSE, 1559.
Galileo demonstrating his telescope.
ARISTOTLE (384-322 B.C.).
An astronomer (Ptolemy of Alexandria?)
EGYPTIAN COIN: PTOLEMY I.
Galileo receiving Milton, illustration
Milton visiting Galileo, illustration
Geocentric and heliocentric models of the universe
Galileo Galilei's drawing of the Moon at first quarter.
Imaginative reconstruction of Ptolemy of Alexandria in his observatory.
Imaginative reconstruction of Hipparchus in his observatory in Alexandria.
Galileo Galilei's method of measuring the height of lunar mountains.
Diagram depicting Galileo's experiment to prove the existence of a vacuum.
Diagram depicting Galileo's experiment to measure the force of a ball.
Galileo Galilei's sketch of what he called the 'triple nature' of Saturn.
Galileo Galilei's drawing of the distortion of lunar features close to the limb of the Moon.
Title page of the Latin edition of Galileo Dialogo by Galileo Galilei.
GALEN AND HIPPOCRATES.
Ptolemy (Claudius of Ptolemaeus)
The Aristotelian concept of the path of a projectile.
The Aristotelian concept of the path of projectile.
Aristotle, 384 BC 322 BC
Aristotelian concept of the path of a projectile.
Ptolemy, Ancient Greek astronomer
Death of Hypatia, illustration
Aristotle as a young man, illustration
Aristotle, Ancient Greek philosopher
NICOLAUS COPERNICUS
Nicolaus Copernicus, Polish astronomer
The Seven Liberal Arts
Death of Hypatia, Ancient Greek philosopher, illustration
Pharmacopoea (1607)
RAPHAEL: PLATO & ARISTOTLE.
Aristotle (384-322 BC), Greek Philosopher, Woodcut from "Les Vrais Pourtraits et vies des Hommes Illustres", Andre Thevet, 1584
ST. THOMAS AQUINAS
John Milton & Galileo Galilei.
Galileo Galilei, Italian astronomer
Galileo Galile, Italian astronomer
GALILEO GALILEI (1564-1642)
MILTON VISITING GALILEO.
EGYPTIAN CELESTIAL SPHERE.
Hydrodynamics, from Galileo.
PTOLEMAIC UNIVERSE, 1481.
GALILEO: MOON, 1611.
An experiment conducted by Galileo Galilei.
Title page of Galileo's 'Sidereus Nuncius', 1610
GALEN (129-c200 A.D.).
Head of Alexander the Great
The arrangement of lenses in Galileo Galilei's telescope.
Trial of Galileo, Rome, 1633, Oil on Canvas, Italian School
The path of a projectile shown as a circular arc.
PHILO JUDAEUS
Galileo's Moon observations, 1610
Ptolemy (Claudius of Ptolemaeus c90-158)
Aristotle (384-322 BC)
Aristotle,
Nicolas Copernicus (1473-1543)
Aristotle
St Thomas Aquinas (c1225-1274)
Page from the first printed edition of Ptolemy Almagest.
Ptolemy, Greek astronomer
Ptolemy, Greek astronomer, artwork
RAPHAEL: SCHOOL OF ATHENS.
Nicolaus Copernicus
Claudius Ptolemaeus, Greek astronomer
ALEXANDER & ARISTOTLE.
WORLD MAP, c1486-93.
絵画
Aristotle and His Pupil, Alexander, Illustration, 1885
World Map with Planets 1702
PLANETARY SYSTEMS.
Virginia Galileo, Galileo's daughter
PLATO: TITLE PAGE.
Galileo's falling bodies experiment
Galileo Galilei's observations of Jupiter and it's satellites.
APIAN: WORLD MAP, 1530.
EMPEROR JULIAN II (331-363).
Tiberius Claudius Caesar Augustus Germanicus or Claudius I
MILTON & GALILEO, 1638-39.
CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA
WORLD MAP, 1482.
Sir Isaac Newton, English physicist
PTOLEMAIC UNIVERSE, 1534.
PTOLEMY: ALMAGEST, 1490.
PTOLEMAIC UNIVERSE, 1493.