Between 2015 and 2016 a series of seminars on the history of early modern technology and medicine were held at the Centres for Medical History and Biomedical Modelling and Analysis of the University of Exeter. As a result of that work we laid down the basis for the first historically accurate reconstruction of a seventeenth-century instrument, the pulsilogium of Sanctorius (1561-1636). Previous copies were in fact either simple models for display or lacked any commitment to historical accuracy. This short contribution explores some of the results we obtained from the recreation of this device and experiments we recreated which shed new light on the early application of the pendulum as a scientific instrument. A fuller and much more detailed account of these discoveries will be given in a forthcoming contribution edited by Filip Buyse for a special issue of the Journal of Social and Political Science.
2015年至2016年期间,在埃克塞特大学医学史和生物医学建模与分析中心举办了一系列关于早期现代技术和医学史的研讨会。作为这项工作的结果,我们为对17世纪的乐器——圣托里乌斯pulsilogium(1561-1636)——进行历史上第一次精确的重建奠定了基础。事实上,以前的复制品要么是简单的展示模型,要么缺乏对历史准确性的承诺。这篇简短的文章探讨了我们从这个装置和实验中获得的一些结果,这些结果对摆作为一种科学仪器的早期应用有了新的认识。菲利普·拜斯(philip Buyse)将为《社会与政治科学杂志》(Journal of Social and Political Science)的特刊编辑一篇文章,对这些发现进行更全面、更详细的阐述。
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