Art and the Ordered Cosmos:

The Mechanistic Universe: European Views of Nature and the Cosmos in the 18th Century

unit by Dr. Deborah Vess

 

Philosophy in the Age of Reason

Bacon

Galileo

Descartes

Science in the Age of Reason

General Resources on Science in the Age of Reason

Leibniz

Newton

Music intro by Dr. Deborah Vess; chapter by Dr. Greg Pepetone

Voltaire

18th Century Landscape Gardens

Philosophy in the Age of Reason

 

Descartes

Descartes site focuses on Descartes's mathematical contributions

References for Descartes a bibliography

Rene Descartes and the Legacy of Mind/Body Dualism

Philosopher All Stars: Descartes

Biography of Descartes

Mind and Body: Descartes to William James

Discourse on Method

Meditations

 

Leibniz

Gottfried Leibniz

 

Bacon

 Francis Bacon

Voltaire

Candide

Philosophical Dictionary

Voltaire Society of America

 

Science in the Age of Reason 

Galileo

Galileo: Biography

An Astronomical Instrument of Galileo's Age

Galileo's drawings of the sun spots

Galileo's observations of the moons of Jupiter

Ptolomy's Universe

Copernicus's Universe

 

Newton

Newtonia at The Newton Institute very nice set of references, from biography to maps of locations associated with Newton.

Newton: Biography from Men of Mathematics

The Life,Times and Achievements of Sir Isacc Newton from The World's 100 Greatest people audiocassette collection. You can read and listen to this text.

Newton and Microgravity

Newton: Hyperlinked Biography fromEric's Treasure Trove of Scientific Biographies.

 

General Resources

Anthony van Leeuwenhoek

Museum of the History of Science: Oxford

Images, online exhibits and loads of other information

Jesuits and the Sciences

The Royal Society

Eric's Treasure Trove of Scientific Biography

General Astronomy Information fromThe Royal Greenwich Observatory

WWW History of Science and Medicine

Royal Greenwich Observatory

History and Philosophy of Western Astronomy

History of Science and Ideas

Contains a number of interesting links to explore

 

Music and the Ordered Cosmos

Music reflected the Enlightened belief in the mathematical predictability and order of the universe. In music of the Classical Age, phrases are generally a predictable and regular length throughout a composition, there are predictable patterns of tonal progression, regular rhythms, and certain forms, such as symphonic form or sonata-allegro form which were also very orderly in their obedience to formal rules and structures. Listen to the Mozart concerto below for an example. Follow the links below for other examples.

Mozart Piano Concerto in d minor, K. 466. Click on the poster to start the performance.

Performance by Dr. Deborah Vess in 1985 with the Penn State Symphony Orchestra. Dedicated with love to my teacher, Mrs. Betty Lief Sims of Dallas, Texas, who introduced me to the wonders of interdisciplinary learning, and to Dr. Steven Smith, under whose direction I performed this piece. All rights reserved; copyright 1999.

Click here to read the chapter on 18th century music by Dr. Greg Pepetone.

Other Links to explore:

Haydn: Classical Midi Archives

Mozart: Classical Midi Archives

Bach: Classical Midi Archives

 

Eighteenth-Century Landscape Gardens

The belief that the universe was a mathematically ordered place is also manifested in eighteenth-century gardens. Nature was sculptured and made to fit an orderly mold of human creation. Descartes had argued that one could enter the chambers of one's own mind, and discover the one thing that one could know absolutely for certain: I think, therefore I am. From there, one could construct knowledge of the universe. Later thinkers criticized Descartes from arguing that one need not look at the universeto know what it must be like, for he argued that an examination of the contents of one's own mind was all that was necessary to know certain truths about the universe.

Similarly, landscape architects were unwilling to see nature as wild or untamed, and created artificial environments in which nothing was left to chance. in which nature obeyed the laws which humans said it must obey.

Viewers may want to explore some examples of eighteenth-century landscape gardens through Dr. Rob Viau's WWW site.

 

 

 

copyright © Dr. Deborah Vess 1998-2001, Georgia College & State University and the Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia. All rights reserved. Rights to chapters authored by contributing faculty members reserved to Georgia College & State University, to the Interdisciplinary Studies Program at GC&SU, and to the individual faculty authors.