The Tuscan Artist - Images of Galileo in Milton’s works

In The Areopagitica, his most important work of prose, John Milton mentions Galileo as the illustrious martyr who fought for the freedom of thought. The name of the great scientist is repeated several times in the English poet’s epic masterpiece: Paradise Lost. In three different passages of the poe...

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Main Author: Toscano Fabio
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sissa Medialab 2004-09-01
Series:JCOM: Journal of Science Communication
Subjects:
Online Access:http://jcom.sissa.it/article/art030302.pdf
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spelling doaj-138f150b78ba42c8b6208abfeb09435c2020-11-25T04:00:51ZengSissa MedialabJCOM: Journal of Science Communication1824-20492004-09-0133The Tuscan Artist - Images of Galileo in Milton’s worksToscano FabioIn The Areopagitica, his most important work of prose, John Milton mentions Galileo as the illustrious martyr who fought for the freedom of thought. The name of the great scientist is repeated several times in the English poet’s epic masterpiece: Paradise Lost. In three different passages of the poem, Milton in fact celebrates the “Tuscan Artist” and his crucial achievements in astronomy. Nevertheless, in a subsequent passage, the poet addresses the Copernican issue without openly defending the heliocentric theory confirmed by Galileo’s discoveries. In fact, he neither embraces the Copernican system nor the Ptolemaic one, but instead compares them, following a dialectic method where one cannot fail to notice an echo of Galileo’s Dialogue Concerning the two Chief World Systems. Milton’s literary work presents images of astronomy at that time, thus offering a valuable historical example of scientific communication through art.http://jcom.sissa.it/article/art030302.pdfMiltonGalileoartist
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Toscano Fabio
spellingShingle Toscano Fabio
The Tuscan Artist - Images of Galileo in Milton’s works
JCOM: Journal of Science Communication
Milton
Galileo
artist
author_facet Toscano Fabio
author_sort Toscano Fabio
title The Tuscan Artist - Images of Galileo in Milton’s works
title_short The Tuscan Artist - Images of Galileo in Milton’s works
title_full The Tuscan Artist - Images of Galileo in Milton’s works
title_fullStr The Tuscan Artist - Images of Galileo in Milton’s works
title_full_unstemmed The Tuscan Artist - Images of Galileo in Milton’s works
title_sort tuscan artist - images of galileo in milton’s works
publisher Sissa Medialab
series JCOM: Journal of Science Communication
issn 1824-2049
publishDate 2004-09-01
description In The Areopagitica, his most important work of prose, John Milton mentions Galileo as the illustrious martyr who fought for the freedom of thought. The name of the great scientist is repeated several times in the English poet’s epic masterpiece: Paradise Lost. In three different passages of the poem, Milton in fact celebrates the “Tuscan Artist” and his crucial achievements in astronomy. Nevertheless, in a subsequent passage, the poet addresses the Copernican issue without openly defending the heliocentric theory confirmed by Galileo’s discoveries. In fact, he neither embraces the Copernican system nor the Ptolemaic one, but instead compares them, following a dialectic method where one cannot fail to notice an echo of Galileo’s Dialogue Concerning the two Chief World Systems. Milton’s literary work presents images of astronomy at that time, thus offering a valuable historical example of scientific communication through art.
topic Milton
Galileo
artist
url http://jcom.sissa.it/article/art030302.pdf
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