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Abstract 


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References 


Articles referenced by this article (19)

  • White , Compare Hayden . 1987. 1–25. Baltimore especially on the consequences of a narrative style; Paul Ricoeur, ‘Narrative Time’, in, edited by W. J. T. Mitchell (Chicago, 1981), pp. 165–86, on the effects of chronology; Geoffrey Cantor,(London, 1991), especially p. 291, on the need for case studies in the history of the relationship of science and religion.

  • Compare Shapin Steven Schaffer Simon Princeton 1985 1 18 David N. Livingstone, ‘Darwinism and Calvinism: The Belfast-Princeton Connection’, , 83 (1992), 408–28, especially pp. 427–8, which stresses the value of a sense of place and of local circumstances in constructing accounts of the past (to which Brooke is more sensitive, say, in Chapter VIII than in Chapter V).

  • The most important work to argue that science played a part in creating an increasingly secular world in the late seventeenth century is Thomas Keith London 1971 641 647 especially see also C. John Sommerville, (New York, 1992), pp. 144–64, which, although suggesting that there were processes of secularization at work in this period, points out that intellectual and scientific changes came on the whole too late to be more than incidental to them. For a rather different (and more convincing) chronology, see Owen Chadwick, (Cambridge, 1975).

  • It is worth pointing out here that Bruno, a ‘renegade monk’ for Brooke (pp. 28, 39), was in fact a Dominican friar: see Yates Frances A. London 1964 190 190 John Bossy, (New Haven, 1991), pp. pp. 62–3, 134.

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    Yolton

    1984


  • For the notion of incoherence, see Wittgenstein Ludwig Rees Rush Miles A.C. 1979 1 7 Gringley-on-the-Hill by Doncaster especially However, Wittgenstein also argues here for the inadequacy of historical explanations on their own, especially p. 8.

  • See Lobo Francis M. Cunningham French Cambridge 1990 216 253 in Wilson (footnote 8), especially pp. 24–34. Both of these, however, tend to assume that the religious and political sympathies of their subjects will necessarily have been coherent.

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