Difference between revisions of "Angelo Secchi Project"

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Angelo Secchi (1818-1878) is certainly one of most intriguing and interesting charachter within the Italian scientific community during the 19th century<ref>Ileana Chinnici, Wiktor Gramatowski, ''Le carte di Angelo Secchi S.J. (1818-1878) conservate presso la Pontificia Università Gregoriana. Un inventario rivisitato'', Nuncius. Annali di storia della scienza, 16 (2001), nr. 2, pp. 571-627. See [[ASP Bibliography 0001]]</ref>. For almost 30 years he was head of the Roman College Astronomical Observatory; he was physicist, astronomer, meteorologist and a passionate lover of Archeology and Paleontology.
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== The Angelo Secchi collection between science and religion ==
 +
Slow times of the archives have nothing to do with the speed of our times. Highly complex societies, like ours, demonstrate a growing interest in acceleration, unlike the society of the ancien régime that praised the art of prudence, which presupposed a slow and active perception of time. The speeding-up, while generating shock and stress, is often seen as a value (thus a necessary issue) in the decision-making processes, in the establishment of the diagnosis, in obtaining results, in the movements, etc.
 +
[[File:Angelo Secchi.jpg|thumb|Angelo Secchi (1818-1878)]]
 +
 
 +
The archives' possibilities to exist in our time are slim considering that the archives require a long time to achieve results. Over the past decade, the almost non-existent requirement for material on Angelo Secchi would seem to confirm this hypothesis.
 +
 
 +
Besides these epochal conditions affecting the archives, in the case of Angelo Secchi's Fund, there is a huge amount of documentation. To that effect, we want to promote a type of search that avoid considering the Archives as a kind of supermarket of information, that is an accomplice of information overload, which normally does not generate knowledge but rather complexity: no information, since no selection is applied, thus precluding the possibility to establish connections and comparisons.  Knowledge, in this case, means the ability to describe starting from differences and distinctions.
 +
 
 +
For this reason we want to draw a "Angelo Secchi" project,  as search program that allows us to select the information to address some problems, namely describing them more adequately. For example, considering the debate "Science/Religion" - sometimes confused as "Faith/Science"- not as a simple opposition between alternatives where the truth could dwell, but as functional positions within the same social system. Any historiographical operation, also the one intended for the production of the so-called "history of science", could not be achieved if detached from a theory of society, as documentation is always contextualized documentation, that is produced by a society in a given age. Often the problem is that the description of the society - and therefore also the historiography that the same produces - focuses on categories that come from the classic European tradition, generated and suited to the enlightenment. Being made in times of reduced complexity, these categories do not respond to the needs and the urgencies of a social system as ours, which is enormously specialized and differentiated.
 +
 
 +
This research approach starts from a theory of differentiation which considers the documentation as the production of a given social system, and not of an individual (Angelo Secchi), which equates to consider Angelo Secchi as a "socialized person". This issue assumes that society is composed of communications and not by individuals, that is why this research project intends to observe communication, exercising on it an observation, known as second order observation, under which it is possible locating the latencies that contemporaries were unable to observe.
 +
 
 +
A careful choice of documentation may help describe the social system with which the person Angelo Secchi interacted; that society was evolving from a society based on a hierarchical differentiation towards a society where primary differentiation became functional. In this type of social system an utterance belongs to the scientific system when it is falsifiable (Karl Popper), that is to say when it is possible to submit it to the criteria of verifiability. This implies that there are statements that cannot be judged starting from the distinction truth/falsity, therefore non-scientific statements.
 +
 
 +
This issue indicates a functionally differentiated society, namely, where various systems (science, law, art, religion) interact. They refer to the society only through their function in relation to it. The person, in principle, is included in all of these subsystems but its interaction (and communication) shall depend on them.  In what concerns the science system, its delimitation is constituted starting from the binary code truth/non-truth. To apply this code, there is a need for a program which is consists of a theory and a methodology. The methodology characterizes the internal procedures of science (the modes of falsifiability) and the theory in turn builds the "real" that is observed (the empirical). In this functionally differentiated social system, the religious system does not work within the science system (nor science in the religious or moral system), since the binary code from which its demarcation (operational closure) is carried out is transcendence/immanence. The documentation of the Secchi's Fund could be considered as the production of a time when both the science and the religion systems were taking shape.
 +
 
 +
In the transition (and the documentation produced by Angelo Secchi is an example of this) from a social system with layered differentiation (such as that of the ancien régime) to one which is characterized by functional differentiation, there is the implementation of fundamental changes, and that is what we would be interested to observe. Communication, as evidenced by documentation, is no longer governed by a hierarchy, while leading to differential systems in light of their specific functions. The increasing complexity of modern society is caused by the takeover, by partial systems of society, of the production and selection of the communication. If the structure changes, the structure of the communication  (the semantics) will change too. Following the change of semantics (as cultural heritage of a system) is one of the possible other avenues of pursuit.
 +
 
 +
== [[Angelo Secchi Correspondence|Correspondence]] ==
 +
A large section of Secchi's papers is composed by his huge correspondence. APUG preserves about 8,000 letters sent by and to Angelo Secchi during his life and career, which testify his contribution to the international scientific community of the 19th century. Within this project all the letters will be digitized and transcribed, starting from his correspondence with the Italian astronomer [[Pietro Tacchini]] (1838–1905).
 +
 
 +
== [[Angelo Secchi Works|Works]] ==
 +
Many of the works published by Secchi are preserved by APUG in their manuscript or draft form. Through these papers it is possible to study the evolution of Secchi's work before and after the publication of his books and papers. However, in this section we will give the priority to unpublished manuscripts, such as his travel diaries.
 +
 
 +
== [[Angelo Secchi Bibliography|Bibliography]] ==
 +
As it has been done for other GATE projects, also for Secchi we want to set up a bibliography where publications about him and his scientific thought are recorded. <br />
 +
Even in this case, the starting points to collect bibliographical information will be the Polgar's and ''Archivum Historicum Societatis Iesu'' bibliographies. Anyone who has an account can contribute to this bibliography:
 +
* to request an account, please [[Special:Contact|fill this form]];
 +
* to add new bibliographical entries go to the [[Form:ASP Bibliography entries|Angelo Secchi Bibliography form]]. Please, before adding new entries, remember to carefully read the [[Bibliography Guidelines]].
 +
 
 +
== Copyrights ==
 +
'''Unless otherwise indicated''', all files and contributions (transcriptions, pages, comments) uploaded and submitted to GATE by administrators and users are considered to be released under the [https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ '''Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License''']. All the rights on the images of the manuscripts or other documentation are property of the Historical Archives of the Pontifical Gregorian University ([[User:ArchivesPUG]]). If you need high resolution images for your publications or for other usages, please contact us [[Special:Contact|using this form]]. [[File:Cc_by-nc-nd_euro_icon.svg|right]]<br />
 +
 
 +
Your contributions to GATE must be original or, at most, copied from public domain or similar free sources. Remember to always cite your sources and, more important, '''do not submit copyrighted work without permission'''.<br />
 +
 
 +
Report any abuses to the project administrators, [[Special:Contact|using this form]].
  
[[File:Angelo Secchi.jpg|thumb|right|Angelo Secchi (1818-1878)]]
 
== Correspondence ==
 
== Works ==
 
== Bibliography ==
 
 
== Acknowledgements ==
 
== Acknowledgements ==
This page has been written thanks to the kindness and wide knowledge about Angelo Secchi of Ileana Chinnici.
+
This page has been written thanks to Ileana Chinnici's kindness and broad knowledge about Angelo Secchi.
== References ==
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<!-- == References ==
 
<references />
 
<references />
 +
Angelo Secchi (1818-1878) is undoubtedly one of most intriguing and interesting charachter within the Italian scientific community of the 19th century. For almost 30 years he has been head of the Roman College Astronomical Observatory; he was physicist, astronomer, meteorologist and a passionate enthusiast of Archeology and Paleontology.<br />
 +
Today most of his papers are preserved in the Historical Archives of the Pontifical Gregorian University; a first finding aid of these papers was published by Ileana Chinnici and Wiktor Gramatowski in 2001<ref>Ileana Chinnici, Wiktor Gramatowski, ''Le carte di Angelo Secchi S.J. (1818-1878) conservate presso la Pontificia Università Gregoriana. Un inventario rivisitato'', Nuncius. Annali di storia della scienza, 16 (2001), nr. 2, pp. 571-627. See [[ASP Bibliography 0001]].</ref>. -->
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 +
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Revision as of 09:51, 28 October 2019

The Angelo Secchi collection between science and religion

Slow times of the archives have nothing to do with the speed of our times. Highly complex societies, like ours, demonstrate a growing interest in acceleration, unlike the society of the ancien régime that praised the art of prudence, which presupposed a slow and active perception of time. The speeding-up, while generating shock and stress, is often seen as a value (thus a necessary issue) in the decision-making processes, in the establishment of the diagnosis, in obtaining results, in the movements, etc.

Angelo Secchi (1818-1878)

The archives' possibilities to exist in our time are slim considering that the archives require a long time to achieve results. Over the past decade, the almost non-existent requirement for material on Angelo Secchi would seem to confirm this hypothesis.

Besides these epochal conditions affecting the archives, in the case of Angelo Secchi's Fund, there is a huge amount of documentation. To that effect, we want to promote a type of search that avoid considering the Archives as a kind of supermarket of information, that is an accomplice of information overload, which normally does not generate knowledge but rather complexity: no information, since no selection is applied, thus precluding the possibility to establish connections and comparisons. Knowledge, in this case, means the ability to describe starting from differences and distinctions.

For this reason we want to draw a "Angelo Secchi" project, as search program that allows us to select the information to address some problems, namely describing them more adequately. For example, considering the debate "Science/Religion" - sometimes confused as "Faith/Science"- not as a simple opposition between alternatives where the truth could dwell, but as functional positions within the same social system. Any historiographical operation, also the one intended for the production of the so-called "history of science", could not be achieved if detached from a theory of society, as documentation is always contextualized documentation, that is produced by a society in a given age. Often the problem is that the description of the society - and therefore also the historiography that the same produces - focuses on categories that come from the classic European tradition, generated and suited to the enlightenment. Being made in times of reduced complexity, these categories do not respond to the needs and the urgencies of a social system as ours, which is enormously specialized and differentiated.

This research approach starts from a theory of differentiation which considers the documentation as the production of a given social system, and not of an individual (Angelo Secchi), which equates to consider Angelo Secchi as a "socialized person". This issue assumes that society is composed of communications and not by individuals, that is why this research project intends to observe communication, exercising on it an observation, known as second order observation, under which it is possible locating the latencies that contemporaries were unable to observe.

A careful choice of documentation may help describe the social system with which the person Angelo Secchi interacted; that society was evolving from a society based on a hierarchical differentiation towards a society where primary differentiation became functional. In this type of social system an utterance belongs to the scientific system when it is falsifiable (Karl Popper), that is to say when it is possible to submit it to the criteria of verifiability. This implies that there are statements that cannot be judged starting from the distinction truth/falsity, therefore non-scientific statements.

This issue indicates a functionally differentiated society, namely, where various systems (science, law, art, religion) interact. They refer to the society only through their function in relation to it. The person, in principle, is included in all of these subsystems but its interaction (and communication) shall depend on them. In what concerns the science system, its delimitation is constituted starting from the binary code truth/non-truth. To apply this code, there is a need for a program which is consists of a theory and a methodology. The methodology characterizes the internal procedures of science (the modes of falsifiability) and the theory in turn builds the "real" that is observed (the empirical). In this functionally differentiated social system, the religious system does not work within the science system (nor science in the religious or moral system), since the binary code from which its demarcation (operational closure) is carried out is transcendence/immanence. The documentation of the Secchi's Fund could be considered as the production of a time when both the science and the religion systems were taking shape.

In the transition (and the documentation produced by Angelo Secchi is an example of this) from a social system with layered differentiation (such as that of the ancien régime) to one which is characterized by functional differentiation, there is the implementation of fundamental changes, and that is what we would be interested to observe. Communication, as evidenced by documentation, is no longer governed by a hierarchy, while leading to differential systems in light of their specific functions. The increasing complexity of modern society is caused by the takeover, by partial systems of society, of the production and selection of the communication. If the structure changes, the structure of the communication (the semantics) will change too. Following the change of semantics (as cultural heritage of a system) is one of the possible other avenues of pursuit.

Correspondence

A large section of Secchi's papers is composed by his huge correspondence. APUG preserves about 8,000 letters sent by and to Angelo Secchi during his life and career, which testify his contribution to the international scientific community of the 19th century. Within this project all the letters will be digitized and transcribed, starting from his correspondence with the Italian astronomer Pietro Tacchini (1838–1905).

Works

Many of the works published by Secchi are preserved by APUG in their manuscript or draft form. Through these papers it is possible to study the evolution of Secchi's work before and after the publication of his books and papers. However, in this section we will give the priority to unpublished manuscripts, such as his travel diaries.

Bibliography

As it has been done for other GATE projects, also for Secchi we want to set up a bibliography where publications about him and his scientific thought are recorded.
Even in this case, the starting points to collect bibliographical information will be the Polgar's and Archivum Historicum Societatis Iesu bibliographies. Anyone who has an account can contribute to this bibliography:

Copyrights

Unless otherwise indicated, all files and contributions (transcriptions, pages, comments) uploaded and submitted to GATE by administrators and users are considered to be released under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. All the rights on the images of the manuscripts or other documentation are property of the Historical Archives of the Pontifical Gregorian University (User:ArchivesPUG). If you need high resolution images for your publications or for other usages, please contact us using this form.

Cc by-nc-nd euro icon.svg


Your contributions to GATE must be original or, at most, copied from public domain or similar free sources. Remember to always cite your sources and, more important, do not submit copyrighted work without permission.

Report any abuses to the project administrators, using this form.

Acknowledgements

This page has been written thanks to Ileana Chinnici's kindness and broad knowledge about Angelo Secchi.