Bibliography:AKC Bibliography 0407
From GATE
Findlen, Paula. How information travels. Jesuit networks, scientific knowledge, and the early modern Republic of Letters, 1540-1640 . (2019).
Name(s) | Findlen, Paula |
---|---|
Title | How information travels. Jesuit networks, scientific knowledge, and the early modern Republic of Letters, 1540-1640 |
Year | 2019 |
Language(s) | eng |
Contained in | FINDLEN, Paula (ed.). Empires of Knowledge. Scientific Networks in the Early Modern World. London, New York: Routledge, 2019, p. 57-105. |
Bibliographic level | Book chapter |
Catalogue description | http://id.sbn.it/bid/PAR1258261 |
Keyword(s) | Republic of Letters; Kircher, Athanasius; Information; Science; Jesuit global network; Correspondence; Nicolas-Claude Fabri de Peiresc; Fernão Cardim; José Acosta; Christophorus Clavius; Gianfrancesco Sagredo; Galileo Galilei; Johann Schreck; Cristoforo Borri; Francesco Barberini; Martino Martini; Magnetic declinations; Magnetism |
Digitization | https://books.google.it/books?id=2nd0DwAAQBAJ&lpg=PP1&hl=pt-BR&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false |
P. 57: "By the beginning of the seventeenth century early modern Europeans envisioned
the Society of Jesus as a community of informed observers who might, willingly or unwillingly, assist with various efforts to collect strategic information in
different parts of the world. "