Henry Oldenburg
Shaping the Royal Society
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Published:17th Jan '02
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Henry Oldenburg, born in 1619 in Bremen, Germany, first came to England as a diplomat on a mission to see Oliver Cromwell. He stayed on in England and in 1662 became the Secretary of the Royal Society, and its best known member to the entire learned world of his time. Through his extensive correspondence, now published, he disseminated the Society's ideals and methods at home and abroad. He fostered and encouraged the talents of many scientists later to be far more famous than he, including Newton, Flamsteed, Malpighi, and Leeuwenhoek with whom, as with many others, he developed real friendship. He founded and edited the Philosophical Transactions, the world's oldest scientific journal. His career sheds new light on the intellectual world of his time, especially its scientific aspects, and on the development of the Royal Society; his private life expands our knowledge of social mobility, the urban society, and the religious views of his time.
Boas Hall narrates her story well and with a tone of compassion. * The British Journal for the History of Science *
... a book that does much to rescue Oldenburgh from the shadows into which his own reticence about his status and abilities might have cast him. In Hall's hands, Oldenburg is restored to his full humanity as well as to the intellectual reputation that he deserved. * Notes and Records *
ISBN: 9780198510536
Dimensions: 240mm x 162mm x 25mm
Weight: 790g
382 pages