Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 January 2009
The concept of popularization, in the present context, implies the existence of a reading public interested in science, together with a corpus of scientific knowledge, part of which, in its range and complexity, was outside the limits of the general understanding.
1 See e.g. Harris, John, Astronomical Dialogues Between a Gentleman and a Lady: wherein The Doctrine of the Sphere, Uses of the Globes, and the Elements of Astronomy and Geography are Explain'd, In a Pleasant, Easy and Familiar Way, London, 1719.Google Scholar
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