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Mihnea Dobre

University of Bucharest
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  •  Publications
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 More details
  • University of Bucharest
    Department of Philosophy
    Post-doctoral fellow
Homepage
Bucharest, Romania
0000-0002-9208-9174
Areas of Specialization
General Philosophy of Science
17th/18th Century Philosophy
Areas of Interest
Philosophy of Religion
Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy
General Philosophy of Science
17th/18th Century Philosophy
  • All publications (41)
  • Cartesianism and Chymistry
    Society and Politics 5 121-136. 2011.
  • The Vanishing Nature of Body in Descartes’s Natural Philosophy
    In , Springer. 2011.
  • Mixing Cartesianism and Newtonianism: the Reception of Cartesian Physics in England
    In , Springer. 2014.
  • Experimental physics in Cartesian natural philosophy
    Bucharest Colloquium. 2012.
    Paper presented in the 3rd edition of Bucharest Colloquium on Early Modern Science.
  •  55
    Gideon Manning, Matter and Form in Early Modern Science and Philosophy. Leiden and Boston, MA: Brill, 2012. Pp. x+248. ISBN 978-90-04-21870-3. €105.00 (review)
    British Journal for the History of Science 47 (2): 375-376. 2014.
    ISI Document Delivery No.: AQ7BS.
    17th/18th Century Philosophy
  • Rohault’s Traité de physique and its Newtonian reception
    In , Springer. 2012.
  •  22
    III. Seventeenth-Century Experiments with Glass Drops: Henricus Regius and Nicolas Poisson on glass drops | From natural history to science
    From Natural History to Science. 2012.
  • Considerații despre filosofia experimentului în perioada modernă timpurie
    Revista de Filosofie 61 631-642. 2014.
    17th/18th Century Philosophy, MiscellaneousHistory of Science
  • Vacuum Experiments in Cartesian Context
    andHps 4. 2012.
    Draft.
    Quantum Mechanics
  •  46
    On Glass-Drops: a case Study of the Interplay between Experimentation and Explanation in Seventeenth-Century Natural Philosophy
    Journal of Early Modern Studies 2 (1): 105-124. 2013.
    The glass drop is a tear-shaped object with many curious properties. Although having a fragile tail, its main body is hard to break. On the other hand, breaking such a drop produces a loud noise and many very small particles of glass. In the seventeenth century, these objects became the focus of both experimental and natural philosophical investigation. In this article, I examine the ways in which various natural philosophers have dealt with glass-drops. This is neither a complete enumeration of…Read more
    The glass drop is a tear-shaped object with many curious properties. Although having a fragile tail, its main body is hard to break. On the other hand, breaking such a drop produces a loud noise and many very small particles of glass. In the seventeenth century, these objects became the focus of both experimental and natural philosophical investigation. In this article, I examine the ways in which various natural philosophers have dealt with glass-drops. This is neither a complete enumeration of the countless attempts to explain the object and its associated phenomena, nor a search for its origins. Rather, this study offers a glimpse into what was at stake in the inclusion of the glass drop—a new scientific object—into natural philosophy. I shall argue that a full description of the drop and of its properties required both experiment and speculation.
    History of Physics17th/18th Century Philosophy, Misc
  •  39
    Introduction
    with Tammy Nyden
    In , Springer. 2013.
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