Chapter
Open Access
12 New approaches in the Renaissance
-
Philipp Roelli
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Contents V
- Acknowledgements and practicalities XI
- Introduction 1
-
Part 1 Semantics of the term ‘science’
- 1 Modern languages: Wissenschaft, science, наука, επιστήμη 11
- 2 Terms for ‘science’ in Greek and Latin 29
- 3 The wider semantic field of ‘science’ in the classical languages 48
- 4 What is science and how does it relate to Denkstil? 80
- 5 The demarcation problem 103
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Part 2 Diachronic panorama of Latin science and learning
- 6 Introductory remarks on Denkstile, epochs, and genres 109
- 7 Greek science and its language in Antiquity 123
- 8 Foundations of Roman science in Latin 156
- 9 The age of the artes liberales 197
- 10 The adoption of the Greek Denkstil 246
- 11 University science: An Aristotelian Revolution 267
- 12 New approaches in the Renaissance 290
- 13 New science in the old tongue 309
- 14 The demise of Latin as language of science 338
- 15 Niches where Latin survived longer 358
- 16 From Latin to vernacular science 374
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Part 3 Changes in the language of science
- 17 Introduction to the linguistics of scientific language 387
- 18 Linguistic development studied in a general scientific corpus 398
- 19 Conclusions on the Latin used in scientific texts 439
- 20 Specific corpora: Arithmetic, historiography, scientific poetry 455
- 21 How are new scientific concepts expressed? 482
- 22 How was Greek science imported into other languages? 505
- 23 The reuse of Latin in the modern languages of science 526
- 24 On the relation between science, culture, and language 539
- Summary and concluding remarks 566
- Appendix 1 575
- Appendix 2 582
- Bibliographies 584
- General Index 635
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Contents V
- Acknowledgements and practicalities XI
- Introduction 1
-
Part 1 Semantics of the term ‘science’
- 1 Modern languages: Wissenschaft, science, наука, επιστήμη 11
- 2 Terms for ‘science’ in Greek and Latin 29
- 3 The wider semantic field of ‘science’ in the classical languages 48
- 4 What is science and how does it relate to Denkstil? 80
- 5 The demarcation problem 103
-
Part 2 Diachronic panorama of Latin science and learning
- 6 Introductory remarks on Denkstile, epochs, and genres 109
- 7 Greek science and its language in Antiquity 123
- 8 Foundations of Roman science in Latin 156
- 9 The age of the artes liberales 197
- 10 The adoption of the Greek Denkstil 246
- 11 University science: An Aristotelian Revolution 267
- 12 New approaches in the Renaissance 290
- 13 New science in the old tongue 309
- 14 The demise of Latin as language of science 338
- 15 Niches where Latin survived longer 358
- 16 From Latin to vernacular science 374
-
Part 3 Changes in the language of science
- 17 Introduction to the linguistics of scientific language 387
- 18 Linguistic development studied in a general scientific corpus 398
- 19 Conclusions on the Latin used in scientific texts 439
- 20 Specific corpora: Arithmetic, historiography, scientific poetry 455
- 21 How are new scientific concepts expressed? 482
- 22 How was Greek science imported into other languages? 505
- 23 The reuse of Latin in the modern languages of science 526
- 24 On the relation between science, culture, and language 539
- Summary and concluding remarks 566
- Appendix 1 575
- Appendix 2 582
- Bibliographies 584
- General Index 635