David Wootton is Anniversary Professor of History, University of York.
"In a quiverful of publications, David Wootton has made it his
mission to help us view the Renaissance thought-world in new ways,
and this elegant biography does not disappoint. The Galileo he
portrays is no saint, either Catholic or secular, but is the more
fascinating for revealing the great scientist's selfishness,
anxiety and political ineptitude, together with all the
intellectual blind alleys taken in struggles towards his eventual
goal. Wootton vividly contrasts the religious and political
claustrophobia of seventeenth-century Italy with the abstract
beauty of the mathematics and geometry which so delighted his
subject. This is an absorbing study worthy of the life-story it
tells.”—Diarmaid MacCulloch
*Diarmaid MacCulloch*
"Wootton’s Galileo is many things: private unbeliever, reluctant
empiricist and impetuous thinker. This brilliant book traces
Galileo’s difficult negotiations of academic jealousies, court
politics and ecclesiastical scrutiny, allows us to imagine the
excitement and danger of looking through a telescope in Venice, and
gives fresh insights into the mind and the man as father and son. A
remarkable achievement."—Justin Champion
*Justin Champion*
"Wootton's biography has much to recommend it. It is engagingly
written and offers fresh insights into Galileo's intellectual
development."—James Hannam, Standpoint Magazine
*Standpoint Magazine*
"Wootton. . . argues persuasively in this well researched,
intellectual biography that Galileo was a Copernican long before
his discovery of the moons of Jupiter proved that not all heavenly
bodies revolved around the Earth."—Manjit Kumar, Sunday
Telegraph
*Telegraph*
"Urgent. . . will garner. . . immediate interest and
controversy."—Literary Review
*Literary Review*
"Wittily challenging... Wootton boldly presents his book as an
intellectual biography which cannot be isolated from contemporary
attitudes to tradition and innovation, and which cannot focus on
Galileo's ideas without considering his personality and personal
relations."—Claudio Vita-Finzi, Times Literary Supplement
*Times Literary Supplement*
"Wootton [is] a deeply erudite historian by trade and a passionate
revisionist by temperament...Read Wooton to meet a Galileo who was
always estranged froom vital aspects of his social and cultural
world--and used that estrangement, as great intellectuals do, to
fuel his intellectual progress."—Anthony Grafton, Bookforum
*Bookforum*
"Fascinating reading. . . . With this highly adventurous portrayal
of Galileo's inner world, Wootton assures himself a high rank among
the most radical recent Galileo interpreters. . . . Undoubtedly
Wootton makes an important contribution to Galileo
scholarship."—John F. Haught, America
*America *
"A deeply erudite historian by trade and a passionate revisionist
by temperament. . . . Read Wootton to meet a Galileo who was always
estranged from vital aspects of his social and cultural world-and
used that estrangement, as a great intellectuals do, to fuel his
intellectual progress."—Anthony Grafton, Bookforum
*Bookforum*
"I heartily recommend [this book]…. Wootton aims at an intellectual
biography and the results are often magnificent, especially when it
comes to explaining the science."—Jonathon Wright, Catholic
Herald
*Catholic Herald*
"...vivid and compelling… [An] engaging subtle and arresting
story."—Eileen Reeves, Times Higher Education
*Times Higher Education*
"Engaging and accessible."—James Wilsdon, Financial Times
*Financial Times*
"Wootton writes a fascinating book…. As a whole, the book is
absolutely first rate, and well worth reading and re-reading."—Revd
Jeremy Craddock, Church Times
*Church Times*
“Wootton has written a thoughtful biography full of Renaissance
detail in which he shows Galileo as a towering figure of genius, a
man whose science was conditioned by his character, and who
character enabled him to formulate a unique view of the Universe
and man’s place in it…..This must be the definitive Galileo
biography for the general reader.”—Barry Kent, The Observatory
Magazine Vol.131
*The Observatory Magazine Vol.131*
“This book is not just a superb biography of Galileo but a good
introduction to the centuries-old debate over religious and
scientific views of truth.”—Contemporary Review
*Contemporary Review*
“Wootton’s insights are unnervingly convincing…”—Nick Wilding,
London Review of Books
*London Review of Books*
"[This book] demonstrates an awesome command of the vast Galileo
literature. . . . Wootton excels in boldly speculating about
Galileo's motives and the overall trajectory of his life. . .
. [An] engaging account."—Owen Gingerich, The New York Times Book
Review
*The New York Times Book Review*
"Wootton has written a lively book that is interesting to read, and
one can concentrate on the fascinating details from the extensive
research."—Noel M. Swerdlow, American Scientist
*American Scientist*
"[This book] demonstrates an awesome command of the vast Galileo
literature. . . . Wootton excels in boldly speculating about
Galileo's motives and the overall trajectory of his life. . .
. [An] engaging account."—Owen Gingerich, The New York Times Book
Review
*The New Criterion*
"[This book] demonstrates awesome command of the vast Galileo
literature. . . . Wootton excels in speculating about Galileo's
motives and in the overall trajectory of his life. . . . [An]
engaging account."—The New York Times Book Review
*The New York Times Book Review*
" . . . a thought-provoking picture of him [Galileo]. . . . To
read this account of how his ideas clashed witht he accepted ones
is to appreciate that he is one of the world's great secular
heroes."—Rob Hardy, The Commercial Dispatch
*The Commercial Dispatch*
Selected as a Choice Outstanding Academic Title for 2011 in the
Astronautics and Astronomy category
*Choice*
“Wootton’s writing achieves its goals well and a thorough
examination and understanding of the large number of Galileo’s
papers that have survived has allowed the author to deliver an
absorbing account. . .Containing exhaustive notes and an excellent
bibliography, Watcher of the Skies is a highly readable account of
the life and career of the controversial, impulsive, often
rebellious and ever-ambitious astronomer, author and
scientist.”—Brian Jones, BBC Sky at Night Magazine
*BBC Sky at Night Magazine*
Ask a Question About this Product More... |