
Hybrid Knowledge and the Historiography of Science
Author(s) -
Alberto Bardi
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
transversal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2526-2270
DOI - 10.24117/2526-2270.2021.i11.09
Subject(s) - astrology , historiography , ninth , history of science , sociology of scientific knowledge , field (mathematics) , epistemology , history , classics , philosophy , physics , archaeology , mathematics , acoustics , pure mathematics
Originating in the field of biology, the concept of the hybrid has proved to be influential and effective in historical studies, too. Until now, however, the idea of hybrid knowledge has not been fully explored in the historiography of pre-modern science. This article examines the history of pre-Copernican astronomy and focuses on three case studies—Alexandria in the second century CE; Baghdad in the ninth century; and Constantinople in the fourteenth century—in which hybridization played a crucial role in the development of astronomical knowledge and in philosophical controversies about the status of astronomy and astrology in scholarly and/or institutional settings. By establishing a comparative framework, this analysis of hybrid knowledge highlights different facets of hybridization and shows how processes of hybridization shaped scientific controversies.