A Short History of Astronomy (1898)/List of Authorities and of Books for Students

A Short History of Astronomy
by Arthur Berry
List of Authorities and of Books for Students
1831433A Short History of Astronomy — List of Authorities and of Books for StudentsArthur Berry


AUTHORITIES AND BOOKS FOR STUDENTS.


I. General.

I have made great use throughout of R. Wolfs Geschichte der Astronomie, and of the six volumes of Delambre's Histoire de l'Astronomie (Ancienne, 2 vols.; du Moyen Age, 1 vol.; Moderne, 2 vols.; du Dixhuitième Stècle, 1 vol.). I shall subsequently refer to these books simply as Wolf and Delambre respectively. I have used less often the astronomical sections of Whewell's History of the Inductive Sciences (referred to as Whewell), and I am indebted—chiefly for dates and references—to the histories of mathematics written respectively by Marie, W. W. R. Ball, and Cajori, to Poggendorffs Handwörterbuch der Exacten Wissenschaften, and to articles in various biographical dictionaries, encyclopaedias, and scientific journals. Of general treatises on astronomy Newcomb's Popular Astronomy, Young's General Astronomy, and Proctor's Old and New Astronomy have been the most useful for my purposes.

It is difficult to make a selection among the very large number of books on astronomy which are adapted to the general reader. For students who wish for an introductory account of astronomy the Astronomer Royal's Primer of Astronomy may be recommended; Young's Elements of Astronomy is a little more advanced, and Sir R. S. Ball's Story of the Heavens, Newcomb's Popular Astronomy, and Proctor's Old and New Astronomy enter into the subject in much greater detail. Young's General Astronomy may also be recommended to those who are not afraid of a little mathematics. There are also three modern English books dealing generally with the history of astronomy, in all of which the biographical element is much more prominent than in this book: viz. Sir R. S. Ball's Great Astronomers, Lodge's Pioneers of Science, and Morton's Heroes of Science: Astronomers.

II. Special Periods.

Chapters I. and II.—In addition to the general histories quoted above—especially Wolf—I have made most use of Tannery's Recherches sur l'Histoire de l'Astronomie Ancienne and of several biographical articles (chiefly by De Morgan) in Smith's Dictionary of Classical Biography and Mythology. Ideler's Chronologische Untersuchungen, Hankel's Geschichte der Mathematik im Alterthum und Mittelalter, G. C. Lewis's Astronomy of the Ancients, and Epping & Strassmaier's Astronomisches aus Babylon have also been used to some extent. Unfortunately my attention was only called to Susemihl's Geschichte der Griechischen Litteratur in der Alcxandriner Zeit when most of my book was in proof, and I have consequently been able to make but little use of it.

I have in general made no attempt to consult the original Greek authorities, but I have made some use of translations of Aristarchus, of the Almagest, and of the astronomical writings of Plato and Aristotle.

Chapter III.—The account of Eastern astronomy is based chiefly on Delambre, and on Hankel's Geschichte der Mathematik im Alterthum und Mittelalter; to a less extent on Whewell. For the West I have made more use of Whewell, and have borrowed biographical material for the English writers from the Dictionary of National Biography. I have also consulted a good many of the original astronomical books referred to in the latter part of the chapter.

I know of no accessible book in English to which to refer students except Whewell.

Chapter IV.—For biographical material, for information as to the minor writings, and as to the history of the publication of the De Revolutionibus I have used little but Prowe's elaborate Nicolaus Coppernicus, and the documents printed in it. My account of the De Revolutionibus is taken from the book itself. The portrait is taken from Dandeleau's engraving of a picture in Lalande's possession. I have not been able to discover any portrait which was clearly made during Coppernicus's lifetime, but the close resemblance between several portraits dating from the 17th century and Dandeleau's seems to shew that the latter is substantially authentic.

There is a readable account of Coppernicus, as well as of several other astronomers, in Bertrand's Fondateurs de l'Astronomie Moderne; but I have not used the book as an authority.

Chapter V.— For the life of Tycho I have relied chiefly on Dreyer's Tycho Brahe, which has also been used as a guide to his scientific work; but I have made constant reference to the original writings: I have also made some use of Gassendi's Vita Tychonis Brahe. The portrait is a reproduction of a picture in the possession of Dr. Crompton of Manchester, described by him in the Memoirs of the Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society, Vol. VI., Ser. III. For minor Continental writers I have used chiefly Wolf and Delambre, and for English writers, Whewell, various articles by De Morgan quoted by him, and articles in the Dictionary of National Biography.

Students will find in Dreyer's book all that they are likely to want to know about Tycho.

Chapter VI.—For Galilei's life I have used chiefly Karl von Gebler's Galilei und die Römische Curie, partly in the original German form and partly in the later English edition (translated by Mrs. Sturge). For the disputed questions connected with the trial I have relied as far as possible on the original documents preserved in the Vatican, which have been published by von Gebler and independently by L'Épinois in Les Pièces du Procès de Galilée: in the latter book some of the most important documents are reproduced in facsimile. For personal characteristics I have used the charming Private Life of Galileo, compiled chiefly from his correspondence and that of his daughter Marie Céleste. I have also read with great interest the estimate of Galilei's work contained in H. Martin's Galilée, and have probably borrowed from it to some extent. What I have said about Galilei's scientific work has been based almost entirely on study of his own books, either in the original or in translation: I have used freely the translations of the Dialogue on the Two Chief Systems of the World and of the Letter to the Grand Duchess Christine by Salusbury, that of the Two New Sciences by Weston (as well as that by Salusbury), and that of the Sidereal Messenger by Carlos. I have also made some use of various controversial tracts written by enemies of Galilei, which are to be found (together with his comments on them) in the magnificent national edition of his works now in course of publication; and of the critical account of Galilei's contributions to dynamics contained in Mach's Geschichte der Mechanik.

Wolf and Delambre have only been used to a very small extent in this chapter, chiefly for the minor writers who are referred to.

The portrait is a reproduction of one by Sustermans in the Uffizi Gallery.

There is an excellent popular account of Galilei's life and work in the Lives of Eminent Persons published by the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge; students who want fuller accounts of Galilei's life should read Gebler's book and the Private Life, which have been already quoted, and are strongly recommended to read at any rate parts of the Dialogue on the Two Chief Systems of the World, either in the original or in the picturesque old translation by Salusbury: there is also a modern German version of this book, as well as of the Two New Sciences, in Ostwald's series of Klassiker der exakten Wissenschaften.

Chapter VII.—For Kepler's life I have used chiefly Wolf and the life—or rather biographical material—given by Frisch in the last volume of his edition of Kepler's works, also to a small extent Breitschwerdt's Johann Keppler. For Kepler's scientific discoveries I have used chiefly his own writings, but I am indebted to some extent to Wolf and Delambre, especially for information with regard to his minor works. The portrait is a reproduction of one by Nordling given in Frisch's edition.

The Lives of Eminent Persons, already referred to, also contains an excellent popular account of Kepler's life and work.

Chapter VIII.—I have used chiefly Wolf and Delambre; for the English writers Gascoigne and Horrocks I have used Whewell and articles in the Dict. Nat. Biog. What I have said about the work of Huygens is taken directly from the books of his which are quoted in the text; and for special points I have consulted the Principia of Descartes, and a very few of Cassini's extensive writings.

There is no obvious book to recommend to students.

Chapter IX.— For the external events of Newton's life I have relied chiefly on Brewster's Memoirs of Sir Isaac Newton; and for the history of the growth of his ideas on the subject of gravitation I have made extensive use of W. W. R. Ball's Essay on Newton's Principia, and of the original documents contained in it. I have also made some use of the articles on Newton in the Encyclopaedia Britannica and the Dictionary of National Biography; as well as of Rigaud's Correspondence of Scientific Men of the Seventeenth Century, of Edleston's Correspondence of Sir Isaac Newton and Prof. Cotes, and of Baily's Account of the Revd. John Flamsteed. The portrait is a reproduction of one by Kneller.

Students are recommended to read Brewster's book, quoted above, or the abridged Life of Sir Isaac Newton by the same author. The Laws of Motion are discussed in most modern text-books of dynamics; the best treatment that I am acquainted with of the various difficulties connected with them is in an article by W. H. Macaulay in the Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society, Ser. II., Vol. III., No. 10, July 1897.

Chapter X.—For Flamsteed I have used chiefly Baily's Account of the Revd. John Flamsteed; for Bradley little but the Miscellaneous Works and Correspondence of the Rev. James Bradley (edited by Rigaud), from which the portrait has been taken. My account of Halley's work is based to a considerable extent on his own writings; there is a good deal of biographical information about him in the books already quoted in connection with Newton and Flamsteed, and there is a useful article on him in the Dictionary of National Biography. I have made a good deal of use in this chapter of Wolf and Delambre, especially in dealing with Continental astronomers; and for special parts of the subject I have used Grant's History of Physical Astronomy, Todhunter's History of the Mathematical Theories of Attraction and the Figure of the Earth, and Poynting's Density of the Earth.

Chapter XI.—Most of the biographical material has been taken from Wolf from articles in various encyclopaedias and biographical dictionaries, chiefly French, and from Delambre's Eloge of Lagrange. The two portraits are taken respectively from Serret's edition of the Oeuvres de Lagrange and from the Academy's edition of the Oeuvres Complètes de Laplace. Gautier's Essai Historique sur le Problème des Trois Corps and Grant's History of Physical Astronomy have been the books most used for my account of the scientific contributions of the various astronomers dealt with; I have also consulted various modern treatises on gravitational astronomy, especially Tisserand's Mécanique Céleste, Brown's Lunar Theory, and to a less extent Cheyne's Planetary Theory and Airy's Gravitation. For special points I have used Todhunter's History, already referred to. Of the original writings I have made a good deal of use of Laplace's Mécanique Céleste as well as of his Système du Monde; I have also consulted a certain number of his other writings and of those of Lagrange and Clairaut; but have made no systematic study of them.

Students who wish to know more about gravitational astronomy but have little knowledge of mathematics should try to read Airy's Gravitation; Herschel's Outlines of Astronomy and Grant's History (quoted above) also deal with the subject without employing mathematics, and are tolerably intelligible.

Chapter XII.—The account of Herschel's career is taken chiefly from Mrs. John Herschel's Memoir of Caroline Herschel, from Miss A. M. Clerke's The Herschels and Modern Astronomy, from the Popular History of Astronomy in the Nineteenth Century by the same author, and from Holden's Sir William Herschel, his Life and Works. The last three books and the Synopsis and Subject Index to the Writings of Sir William Herschel by Holden & Hastings have been my chief guides to Herschel's long series of papers; but nearly everything that I have said about his chief pieces of work is based on his own writings. I have made also some little use of Grant's History (already quoted), of Wolf, and of Miss Clerke's System of the Stars.

Students are recommended to read any or all of the first four books named above; the Memoir gives a charming picture of Herschel's personal life and especially of his relations with his sister. There is also a good critical account of Herschel's work on sidereal astronomy in Proctor's Old and New Astronomy.

Chapter XIII.—Except in the articles dealing with gravitational astronomy I have constantly used Miss Clerke's History (already quoted), a book which students are strongly recommended to read; and in dealing with the first half of the century I have been helped a good deal by Grant's History. But for the most part the materials for the chapter have been drawn from a great number of sources—consisting very largely of the original writings of the astronomers referred to—which it would be difficult and hardly worth while to enumerate; for the lives of astronomers (especially of English ones), as well as for recent astronomical history generally, I have been much helped by the obituary notices and the reports on the progress of astronomy which appear annually in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.

I add the names of a few books which deal with special parts of modern astronomy in a non-technical way:—

The Sun, C. A. Young; The Sun, R. A. Proctor; The Story of the Sun, R. S. Ball; The Suns Place in Nature, J. N. Lockyer.
The Moon, E. Neison; The Moon, T. G. Elger.
Saturn and its System, R. A. Proctor.
Mars, Percival Lowell.
The World of Comets, A. Guillemin (a well-illustrated but uncritical book, now rather out of date); Remarkable Comets, W. T. Lynn (a very small book full of useful information); The Great Meteoritic Shower of November, W. F. Denning.
The Tides and Kindred Phenomena in the Solar System, G. H. Darwin.
Remarkable Eclipses, W. T. Lynn (of the same character as his book on Comets.)
The System of the Stars, A. M. Clerke.
Spectrum Analysis, H. Schellen; Spectrum Analysis, H. E. Roscoe.