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  1. Giovanni Alfonso Borelli ( Pisa 28. ledna 1608 – 31. prosince 1679) byl italský fyziolog, fyzik, astronom a matematik. Přispěl k zavádění moderních principů vědeckého výzkumu, pokračoval v Galileově metodě ověřování hypotéz pozorováním. Zabýval se matematikou, studoval pohyby Jupiterových měsíců a v mikroskopii ...

  2. About this book. This volume provides an introduction to Borelli’s theory on the movement of animals and demonstrates the nature of the energy of percussion, its causes, properties and effects. Building on and moving away from the theory of mechanics as formulated by Aristotle and Galileo and countering objections expressed by Stephani degli ...

  3. The first documented mention of Borelli - who was born in Messina - dates from c. 1630, when he is said to be a student of Benedetto Castelli (1577/8-1643) in Rome. Apparently, it was Castelli who recommended Borelli to the University of Messina for the vacant chair of mathematics.

  4. Borelli se convirtió en un sabio del siglo XVII, cuya meta era alcanzar una comprensión aceptable de diversos fenómenos. La mayor aportación de Borelli a la ciencia es la aplicación de las leyes físicas y matemáticas a los procesos biológicos.Borelli además fue un representante del método experimental, que le servía para certificar sus teorías.

  5. Giovanni Alfonso Borelli ( Pronunciación de italiano: [dʒoˈvanni alˈfɔnso boˈrɛlli]; 28 de enero de 1608 - 31 de diciembre de 1679) fue un fisiólogo, físico y matemático italiano del Renacimiento. Contribuyó al principio moderno de la investigación científica al continuar con la práctica de Galileo de probar hipótesis ...

  6. Giovanni Borelli was an early Italian Copernican, experimenter, and observer. Christened on 28 January 1608 in Naples, he was born to Miguel Alfonso, an itinerant soldier in the occupying Spanish army, and Laura Porrello (also called Borrelli in some records), a native of Naples.

  7. GIOVANNI ALFONSO BORELLI (1608–1679) Borelli’s career can be divided into four different stages: his education in Naples and Rome; his tenure as mathematics professor at Messina; his time in Florence; and finally, his last years in southern Italy. Consequently the following account of Borelli’s life and works follows those four phases.