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Blaise Pascal print that pageTimeline of Blaise Pascal

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. He built twenty of these machines (called the Pascaline ) in the following ten years [ 4 ] . Pascal was a mathematician of the first order. He helped create two major new areas of research. He wrote a significant treatise on the subject of projective geometry at the age of sixteen, and

Lettres provinciales print that page

The Lettres provinciales ( Provincial letters ) are a series of eighteen letters written by French philosopher and theologian Blaise Pascal under the pseudonym Louis de Montalte. Written in the midst of the formulary controversy between the Jansenists and the Jesuits , they are a defense

French literature of the 17th century print that page

Louis_XIV_of_France

In Renaissance France, literature (in the broadest sense of the term) was largely the product of encyclopaedic humanism, and included works produced by an educated class of writers from religious and legal backgrounds. A new conception of nobility, modelled on the Italian Renaissance courts

Scientific revolution print that page

Libr0310

In the history of science , the scientific revolution was a period when new ideas in physics , astronomy , biology , human anatomy , chemistry , and other sciences led to a rejection of doctrines that had prevailed starting in Ancient Greece and continuing through the Middle Ages , and laid

Christiaan Huygens print that pageTimeline of Christiaan Huygens

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Huygens achieved note for his argument that light consists of waves , [ 1 ] now known as the Huygens–Fresnel principle , which became instrumental in the understanding of wave-particle duality . He generally receives credit for his discovery of the centrifugal force, the laws for collision

Jansenism print that page

Jean_Duvergier_de_Hauranne

The term itself was coined by its Jesuit opponents, who accused them of being close to Calvinists , as Jansenists identified themselves as rigorous followers of Augustinism . [ 1 ] Several propositions supported by Jansenists, in particular concerning the relationship between humans' free

Jacques-Bénigne Bossuet print that pageTimeline of Jacques-Bénigne Bossuet

Jacques-B%C3%A9nigne_Bossuet_3

Court preacher to Louis XIV of France , Bossuet was a strong advocate of political absolutism and the divine right of kings . He argued that government was divine and that kings received their power from God. He was also an important courtier and politician. The works best known to English

History of scientific method print that page

Libr0310

The history of scientific method is a history of the methodology of scientific inquiry, as differentiated from a history of science in general. The development and elaboration of rules for scientific reasoning and investigation has not been straightforward; scientific method has been the

John Wallis print that pageTimeline of John Wallis

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John Brehaut Wallis was born in Ashford, Kent , the third of five children of Reverend John Wallis and Joanna Chapman. He was initially educated at a local Ashford school, but moved to James Movat's school in Tenterden in 1625 following an outbreak of plague . Wallis was first exposed to mathematics

First Stadtholderless Period print that page

Grand_Pensionary_Johan_de_Witt

The First Stadtholderless Period or Era (1650–72; Dutch : Eerste Stadhouderloze Tijdperk ) is the period in the history of the Dutch Republic in which it reached the zenith of its economic, military and political Golden Age . The term has acquired a negative connotation in 19th-century