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         Digges Thomas:     more books (26)
  1. The Letters of Thomas Attwood Digges by Robert Henry Elias, Eugene D. Finch, 1982-05
  2. Adventures of Alonso by Thomas Attwood Digges, 1943
  3. Astronomical Thought in Renaissance England: A Study of the English Scientific Writings from 1500 to 1645 by Francis R. Johnson, 1937
  4. A bibliography of Indian geology .. by Thomas Henry Digges La Touche, 2010-08-05
  5. A geometrical practical treatize named Pantometria diuided into three bookes, longimetria, planimetria, and stereometria, containing rules manifolde for ... First published by Thomas Digges. (1591) by Thomas Digges, 2010-07-13
  6. The Theodelitus and Topographical Instrument of Leonard Digges of University College, Oxford. Described by His Son Thomas Digges in 1571. by Thomas (1546-1595). DIGGES, 1927-01-01
  7. LETTERS Of THOMAS ATTWOOD DIGGES (1742 - 1821). by Thomas Attwood].Elias, Robert H. & Finch, Eugene D. - Editors. [Digges, 1982
  8. An essay on ways and means to maintain the honour and safety of England, to encrease trade, merchandize, navigation, ... Written by Sir Walter Raleigh, ... on our harbours, ... by Sir Henry Sheers. by Thomas Digges, 2010-05-29
  9. Adventures of Alonso: Containing Some Striking Anecdotes of the Present Prime Minister of Portugal. by Thomas Atwood & Elias, Robert H. Digges, 1943-01-01
  10. The Portable Elizabethan Reader (Viking Portable Library) by John Donne, Michael Drayton, et all 1946-12
  11. A prognostication everlastinge: Corrected and augmented by Thomas Digges (The English experience, its record in early printed books published in facsimile) by Leonard Digges, 1975
  12. The theodelitus and topographical instrument of Leonard Digges of University College, Oxford: Described by his son Thomas Digges in 1571. Reprinted from ... of Pantometria (Old Ashmolean reprints) by Thomas Digges, 1927
  13. Thomas Digges, the Copernican system, and the idea of the infinity of the universe in 1576 by Francis R Johnson, 1934
  14. In defense of Thomas Digges by William Bell Clark, 1953

101. List Of Scientists By Field
Translate this page digges, Leonard. digges, thomas. Dillenius, Johann Jacob. Dinakara. Dingler, HugoAlbert Emil Hermann. Dini, Ulisse. Dinostratus. Diocles
http://www.indiana.edu/~newdsb/d.html
Dahlberg, Gunnar Dainelli, Giotto Dainelli, Giotto Dakin, Henry Drysdale Dakin, Henry Drysdale Dal Piaz, Giorgio Dal Piaz, Giorgio Dale, Henry Hallett Dale, Henry Hallett Dale, Henry Hallett Dall, William Healey Dalton, John Dalton, John Dalton, John Dalton, John Call Dalton, John Call Daly, Reginald Aldworth Daly, Reginald Aldworth Dam, Henrik Dam, Henrik Dana, James Dwight Dandelin, Germinal Pierre Dandelin, Germinal Pierre Danforth, Charles Haskell Danforth, Charles Haskell Daniell, John Frederic Daniell, John Frederic Daniell, John Frederic Daniels, Farrington Danti, Egnatio Danti, Egnatio Dantzig, David van Dantzig, David van Dantzig, David van Darboux, Jean-Gaston D'Arcet, Jean D'Arcy, Patrick D'Arcy, Patrick Darlington, Cyril Dean Darlington, William Darwin, Charles Galton Darwin, Charles Galton Darwin, Charles Robert Darwin, Charles Robert Darwin, Charles Robert Darwin, Erasmus Darwin, Erasmus Darwin, Erasmus Darwin, Erasmus Darwin, Francis Darwin, George Howard Darwin, George Howard Dasypodius, Cunradus Dasypodius, Cunradus Daubenton, Louis-Jean-Marie Daubenton, Louis-Jean-Marie

102. Diana Price
In short Leonard digges was the stepson of Shakespeare s particularly close soon appoint digges s step-father thomas Russell overseer of his will.
http://ist-socrates.berkeley.edu/~ahnelson/price.html
Return to Authorship page.
Diana Price's Shakespeare's Unorthodox Biography
[For Price's reply and my reply to her reply see below
Diana Price knows how to put a sentence together, but she does not know how to put an argument together without engaging in special pleading: that is, taking evidence that has an apparent signification, and arguing with all her might that it does not fit the special case of William Shakepeare for this or that special - and wholly arbitrary - reason. Take the fact that Ben Jonson writes a poem of dedication to the "memory of my beloved, the author, Mr. William Shakespeare"; or the fact that Jonson reported that he had offended "the Players" who thought he had insulted their "friend" Shakespeare. Jonson explains, "I loved the man, and do honor his memory (on this side Idolatry) as much as any." Master William Shakespeare, whom Jonson also calls "Sweet Swan of Avon," associating him with Stratford upon Avon for any but the wilfully deaf, is thus the recipient of a greater expression of friendship than any contemporary author. Price cannot of course accept this evidence, so she must find some way to discredit it: such evidence is necessarily ironic, or satiric, or deliberately misleading, or written after Shakespeare's death: note that there is always

103. Sito Web Italiano Per La Filosofia-THOMAS DIGGES
Bang fosse una favola. Dopo la scomparsa di Hoyle. di GIULIO GIORELLO.
http://lgxserver.uniba.it/lei/rassegna/digges.htm

INDICE DEI NOMI
THOMAS DIGGES Il Corriere della Sera 25 AGOSTO 2001
  • Se il Big Bang fosse una favola
    Dopo la scomparsa di Hoyle di GIULIO GIORELLO
  • 104. Stories, Listed By Author
    digges, JEREMIAH; pseudonym of Josef Berger, (19031971) di GIOVANNI, NORMANTHOMAS, trans. Afterword, by Jorge Luís Borges, (aw)
    http://contento.best.vwh.net/s75.html
    Index to Science Fiction Anthologies and Collections: Combined Edition
    Stories, Listed by Author
    Previous Table-of-Contents
    DICKSON, GORDON R. (books) (continued)

    105. En Hommage à Galilée

    http://www.astrosurf.org/lombry/galilee-hommage.htm
    En hommage à Galilée Histoire d'une invention (I) En ce matin de la mi-janvier de l'annus domini 1610, le Soleil était toujours sous l'horizon. Alors que le silence de l'hiver engourdissait encore le petit village d'Arcetri situé à quelques kilomètres de Florence, Galilée s'enveloppa chaudement dans sa cape et sortit sur la terrasse située en contrebas de sa villa. Le fameux "tube optique" qu'il avait préparé et fait décoré avec goût était prêt sur son piédestal. Galilée l'avait sortit une demi-heure auparavant afin que l'humidité qui s'était formée sur l'objectif se dissipe. L'instrument qu'il avait construit était très original et seuls quelques savants en avait entendu parlé dont Paolo Sarpi, le conseiller scientifique du Sénat de Venise. A ses dires, la lunette de Galilée contenait des lentilles et permettait de rapprocher les objets lointains presque invisibles et même d'observer les objets célestes. En fait en cette heure matinale, Galilée l'utilisait avec tout le soin qu'on accorde à un prototype car il devait encore convaincre un public d'intellectuels et de "nobles docteurs" très sceptiques des possibilités offertes par ce nouvel instrument. Traité de menteurs par les uns et de magiciens ou presque par les autres, il savait qu'il devait trouver d'autres arguments que l'une ou l'autre découverte bien étrange pour asseoir sa crédibilité. Mais au fond de lui-même, il savait que les

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