Beschreibung:

470 S., 3 Bll. 8 gefalt. Kupfertafeln. 8°. Marmoriertes Ldr. der Zeit mit Rückenschild (etw. beschabt und bestoßen, kl. Wurmgänge).

Bemerkung:

Erste Ausgabe des ersten Bandes dieses Lehrbuch der Physik der Jesuitenuniversität Tyrnau. - Andreas Jaszlinszky (1715 - 1783) "published his physics textbooks as a professor at the University of Trnava, where he taught philosophy, metaphysics, history, ethics, physics and theology. At that time, the University of Trnava was one of the major Jesuit universities in Eastern Europe (and the only university in the Kingdom of Hungary), along with Braunsberg, Lemberg, Vilnius, and Prague. Publication of Physica Generalis and Physica Particularis occurred in response to a 1753 order from Maria Theresa requiring every professor to write textbooks instead of dictating lecture notes, which created a surge of works by Adanyi, Jaszlinszky, Reviczky, Radics, and Horvath. Jaszlinszky became rector of the university in 1771, and after the Suppression of the Society of Jesus in 1773, he became canon in Rozsnyo. He was a contemporary of Johann Baptiste Horvath, Leopold Biwald, and Joseph Redlhamer. These Latin physics textbooks each contain eight plates with descriptions and images of a variety of contemporary physics devices including manometers (fluid statics), lenses/prisms (refraction), and various simple machines. Coverage of electricity is relatively sparse, although many other diverse topics are surveyed, including mechanics, magnetism, celestial mechanics, fluid drag experiments, mineralogy, and human anatomy. Extensive bibliographical references are provided. These textbooks (1750s) at least somewhat ambiguously reflect incorrect Cartesian vortex mechanics, rather than the correct Newtonian mechanics fully embraced by Horvath (1770s). Indeed, modern Newtonian mechanics (1687) was only widely accepted in Hungary by the 1760s and 1770s. Between 1616 and 1759, three years after first publication of Physica Generalis and Physica Particularis, Jesuit scientists could not publish textbooks overtly favoring Copernican models of the solar system, although the heliocentric theory was allowed to be presented along with other theories. However, since Nagyszombat had an astronomical observatory (1755?1773), historians speculate that local Jesuit professors would have observed phenomena that would have convinced them that heliocentrism was correct. Indeed, Jaszlinszky essentially rejected the Ptolemaic approach" (Wikipedia Abruf vom 18.05.2021). - Es fehlt der zweite Band "Physica Particularis". - Vorsatz mit alten hs. Notizen. Titel fleckig. Buchblock etw. angebrochen. Leicht gebräunt und kaum fleckig.