Galileo's Glassworks (nonfiction): Difference between revisions

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File:Galileo's Glassworks in Hydrogen Bubble Chamber.jpg|link=Virtualization of Galileo Galilei|New research in [[virtualization of Galileo Galilei|virtualize Galileo Galilei]] uses ''Galileo's Glassworks'' in hydrogen bubble chamber.
File:Galileo's Glassworks in Hydrogen Bubble Chamber.jpg|link=Virtualization of Galileo Galilei|New research in [[virtualization of Galileo Galilei|virtualize Galileo Galilei]] uses ''Galileo's Glassworks'' in hydrogen bubble chamber.
File:Galileo_E_pur_si_muove.jpg|link=Galileo Galilei (nonfiction)|[[Galileo Galilei (nonfiction)|Galileo]] may experience [[Virtualization of Galileo Galilei|virtualization]] as pain, warns [[John Brunner]].
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Latest revision as of 10:50, 6 November 2016

Front cover of Galileo's Glassworks.

Galileo's Glassworks is a book by Eileen Reeves about Galileo and the invention of the telescope.

From the back cover:

The telescope was 'invented' in 1608. But what about the events leading up to it? Galileo and his contemporaries were searching for a device with which 'from an incredible distance we might read the smallest letters.' Eileen Reeves tells a story of 'cultural optics': magical mirrors and political intrigue, and investigators looking for magnifying power in all the wrong places, while the solution lay in the humble spectacle lenses on their noses.

It is published by Harvard University Press.

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