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Gemma Frisius: a convinced Copernican in 1555

Fernand Hallyn (UGent)
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Organization
Abstract
Gemma Frisius (1508-1555), who worked at the university of Louvain, heard about the Copernican system already around 1530 and afterwards was a careful reader of the Narratio prima and the De Revolutionibus. The article argues that his posthumous preface to the Ephemerides (1556) by his pupil Stadius expresses his ultimate opinion on the system of the world. Moreover, it is also the only text where he tackles the epistemological problems of the question. A careful analysis of this preface shows that at the end of his life, on the ground of observations as well as philosophical demands, he admitted at least the first two movements ascribed to the earth by Copernicus.
Keywords
absurdity, demonstration, epistemology, hypothesis, reception

Citation

Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:

MLA
Hallyn, Fernand. “Gemma Frisius: A Convinced Copernican in 1555.” FILOZOFSKI VESTNIK, vol. 25, no. 2, 2004, p. 69.
APA
Hallyn, F. (2004). Gemma Frisius: a convinced Copernican in 1555. FILOZOFSKI VESTNIK, 25(2), 69.
Chicago author-date
Hallyn, Fernand. 2004. “Gemma Frisius: A Convinced Copernican in 1555.” FILOZOFSKI VESTNIK 25 (2): 69.
Chicago author-date (all authors)
Hallyn, Fernand. 2004. “Gemma Frisius: A Convinced Copernican in 1555.” FILOZOFSKI VESTNIK 25 (2): 69.
Vancouver
1.
Hallyn F. Gemma Frisius: a convinced Copernican in 1555. FILOZOFSKI VESTNIK. 2004;25(2):69.
IEEE
[1]
F. Hallyn, “Gemma Frisius: a convinced Copernican in 1555,” FILOZOFSKI VESTNIK, vol. 25, no. 2, p. 69, 2004.
@article{484476,
  abstract     = {{Gemma Frisius (1508-1555), who worked at the university of Louvain, heard about the Copernican system already around 1530 and afterwards was a careful reader of the Narratio prima and the De Revolutionibus. The article argues that his posthumous preface to the Ephemerides (1556) by his pupil Stadius expresses his ultimate opinion on the system of the world. Moreover, it is also the only text where he tackles the epistemological problems of the question. A careful analysis of this preface shows that at the end of his life, on the ground of observations as well as philosophical demands, he admitted at least the first two movements ascribed to the earth by Copernicus.}},
  author       = {{Hallyn, Fernand}},
  issn         = {{0353-4510}},
  journal      = {{FILOZOFSKI VESTNIK}},
  keywords     = {{absurdity,demonstration,epistemology,hypothesis,reception}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{2}},
  title        = {{Gemma Frisius: a convinced Copernican in 1555}},
  volume       = {{25}},
  year         = {{2004}},
}

Web of Science
Times cited: