Test:Inventions in general: Difference between revisions

From Cornelis Drebbel
Jump to navigation Jump to search
mNo edit summary
m (Text replacement - "<!--historylink type="back" go="1" style=""><historylink-->" to "")
 
Line 11: Line 11:
{{#widget:Iframe |url=https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1-lO3r8Xt-ROIZDwdQ8qbX1C_TJn735Ae8bJIOhG7cK4/pubhtml |width=890 |height=330 }}
{{#widget:Iframe |url=https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1-lO3r8Xt-ROIZDwdQ8qbX1C_TJn735Ae8bJIOhG7cK4/pubhtml |width=890 |height=330 }}


<!--historylink type="back" go="1" style=""><historylink--> &nbsp; &nbsp;[[Subject::Innovations| ]]
&nbsp; &nbsp;[[Subject::Innovations| ]]
[[Category:Test|!]]
[[Category:Test|!]]

Latest revision as of 04:33, 2 May 2023

His (Drebbel's) fame and authority as a philosopher grew from the invention of what he called “living instruments [levendige Instrumenten]” which fused alchemy, mechanics, pneumatics, and physics. Drebbel’s simple, artisanal approach to what appeared to be immediate and pansophic knowledge enthralled many academic alchemists and Ramists in particular. They embraced his machine-based philosophy, including the use of “living instruments”, as a direct means to studying the working of the greater world machine. 

Dr. V Keller, DREBBEL’S LIVING INSTRUMENTS, Hist. Sci., xlviii (2010)

Thermostaat.png

This is a list of authors and / or papers who mentioned several innovations by Cornelis Drebbel: