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Published June 2019 | public
Journal Article

Response to H. Floris Cohen's essay review on Newtonian scholarship

Abstract

Long ago, George Sarton set down criteria for reviewers. In addition to insisting on the need to compose 'faithful' reviews, he cautioned against four types of unfit reviewers: the 'egoist', the 'obscure' reviewer, the one who is noncommittal, and the pedantic critic. Unfortunately, Cohen's review comes short on several counts. Cohen writes that he intends to examine what is 'new' in the three books he reviews, and whether the results therein contained are 'worth learning' (p. 687). Cohen denies being given to 'misplaced hero worship', insisting that his sole aim is to assess whether 'scholarly novelty' (p. 693) has been attained. Nevertheless, given his repeated rebuke of the authors under review for 'failing to refer back to [Richard] Westfall's work' on Newton – now nearly half a century old – it seems that he grounded his critique principally on Westfall's interpretation.

Additional Information

© 2019 British Society for the History of Science. Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 July 2019.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 18, 2023