- Heart, Center of the World, and the Principle of Motion: from Aristotle to Kepler and Galileo
- Evidence for Re-attributing to Pierre Gassendi the Authorship of Anatomia ridiculi muris (1651) and Favilla ridiculi muris (1653)
- Mechanism, vis motiva, and Fermentation: a Reassessment of Borelli’s Physiology
- Form and Matter of Regular Geometrical Bodies in Luca Pacioli’s Summa (1494) and Compendium de divina proportione (1498)
- Between Active Matter and Letters: Kabbalah, Natural Knowledge, and Jewish How-To Books in Early Modern East-Central Europe
- Plato’s Dietetics for Intellectuals in Timaeus 86b–90d
- Excavating the Memory Palace: Arts of Visualization from the Agora to the Computer , written by Seth Long
- Collective Wisdom: Collecting in the Early Modern Academy , edited by Anna Marie Roos and Vera Keller
- Birth Figures: Early Modern Prints and The Pregnant Body , written by Rebecca Whiteley
- On Pestilence: A Renaissance Treatise on Plague , written by Girolamo Mercuriale
- Records of Trusted Medicines: Don Meir Alguades’s Tested Medicines (Segulot Muvḥanyot) in Context
- Simple Motions, Simple Bodies and Aristotle’s Explanation of Locomotion in De Caelo I.2
- The Discovery of chreia: Galen’s Method of Teleological Demonstration and Its Aristotelian Background
- Book Publishing and Geometrical Skills in the Career of Sébastien Le Clerc
- The Anatomy of Galileo’s Anagram
- Forbidden Books and Royal Horoscopes: the Practice and Censorship of Astrology in Early Modern Portugal
- Health and Healing in the Early Modern Iberian World: A Gendered Perspective , edited by Margaret E. Boyle and Sarah E. Cowens
- Gendered Touch: Women, Men, and Knowledge-Making in Early Modern Europe , edited by Francesca Antonelli, Antonella Romano, and Paolo Savoia
- The Shape of Sex: Nonbinary Gender from Genesis to the Renaissance , written by Leah DeVun
- A Newly Identified Treatise on the Tables of Marseilles (Twelfth Century) and Its Non-Ptolemaic Planetary Theory
- Jerónimo Muñoz’s Reception of Proclus’ In Euclidem: Philosophy of Mathematics and an Attempt to Prove the Parallel Postulate
- Intensity Meters: New Notes and Discoveries on the Invention of Early Modern Precision Instruments
- The Constitution of Air: Observation and the Limits of Temperament in Italian Renaissance Medical Writing
- Tempering Occult Qualities: Magnetism and Complexio in Early Modern Medical Thought
- Can Mixtures Be Identified by Touch? The Reception of Galen’s De complexionibus in Italian Renaissance Medicine
- Temperament and the Senses: The Taste, Odor and Color of Drugs in Late-Renaissance Galenism
- Is Memory a Matter of Complexion? On Memory Disorders in the Latin Commentaries on De memoria (1250–1300)
- Complexio and the Transformation of Learned Physiognomy ca. 1200–ca. 1500
- Between Matter and Form: Complexion (mizāǧ) as a Keystone of Avicenna’s Scientific Project
- Complexio in the Late-Medieval Latin De animalibus
- Complexion of the Members, Complexion of the Body, in Late-Medieval Scholastic Medicine
- Can There Be Two Perfectly Identical Complexions? Peter of Abano and Jacopo of Forlì on Avicenna’s Interdict
- The Concept of Complexion in Antonio da Parma’s Medical Anthropology
- Eukrasia and Enkrateia: Greco-Roman Theories of Blending and the Struggle for Virtue
- Complexio. Across Disciplines – Introduction to this Special Issue
- Learned Physicians and Everyday Medical Practice in the Renaissance , written by Michael Stolberg
- Defending Descartes in Brandenburg-Prussia: The University of Frankfurt an der Oder in the Seventeenth Century , written by Pietro Daniel Omodeo
- A Mother’s Manual for the Women of Ferrara: A Fifteenth-Century Guide to Pregnancy and Pediatrics , written by Michele Savonarola
- Baghdad and Isfahan: A Dialogue of Two Cities in an Age of Science ca. 750–1750 , written by Elaheh Kheirandish
- Spirits and the Prolongation of Life in Francis Bacon: Commonality and Difference between the Inanimate and the Animate
- La Luce (1698) by Giovanni Michele Milani – A Final Attempt at Reconciling Atomism and Religion in Seventeenth-Century Rome?
- Sharing the Knowledge at Habsburg Medical Faculties in the Baroque Era: The Case of Jan František Löw’s Reading List for Medical Students in Prague (1693)
- Shadows of the Thrown Spear: Girolamo Cardano on Anxiety, Dreams, and the Divine in Nature
- Francis Bacon on Self-Care, Divination, and the Nature–Fortune Distinction
- Education and the Cultivation of the Early Modern Self: Cultura Animi as Self-Care in Juan Luis Vives
- Astrological Self-Government at the Fifteenth-Century Court of Bourbon
- Governing Health: The Doctor’s Authority, the Patient’s Agency, and the Reading of Regimina sanitatis Literature
- Special Issue Introduction: Individuality, Self-Care, and Self-Preservation in Late Medieval and Early Modern Science
- In Search of the Unicorn’s Virtue in a Rhino Horn Cup: Consumption of Rhino Horns and the Production of Knowledge in Early Modern Lisbon
- Cabanis’ Kunst der Koexistenz lebender Systeme
- Images & Color: The Strasbourg Printer Johann Schott (1477–1548) and His Circle
- Explaining Astrological Influence with Cartesian Natural Philosophy: Peter Megerlin’s Manuscript Astrologia Cartesiana (ASHB1530, circa 1680)
- The Distant Action of the Heavens in Girolamo Borri’s Tidal Theory
- Fascination and Action at a Distance in Francis Bacon
- How to Send a Secret Message from Rome to Paris in the Early Modern Period: Telegraphy between Magnetism, Sympathy, and Charlatanry
- Action at a Distance in Pre-Newtonian Natural Philosophy: An Introduction
- Hydrocephalus in Context: A History from Graeco-Roman Sources
- Iranian World Plant Species in the European Network of Botanical Information Exchange in the Sixteenth Century
- Tycho Brahe’s Health and Death: What Can We Learn from the Trace Element Levels Found in His Hair and Bone Samples?
- Conchophilia: Shells, Art, and Curiosity in Early Modern Europe, edited by Marisa Anne Bass, Anne Goldgar, Hanneke Grootenboer and Claudia Swan
- Renaissance Fun: The Machines Behind the Scenes, written by Philip Steadman
- Micrologus 27, The Diffusion of the Islamic Sciences in the Western World, written by Edizioni del Galluzzo
- Continuity, Change, and Embodied Knowledge in the History of Chymistry
- Could Siberian ‘Natural Curiosities’ Be Replaced? Bioprospecting in the Eighteenth-Century
- Practical Knowledge and the Rhetoric of Experience: Three Italian Surgeons and Their Observations
- Reply to Mark Thakkar
- A Note on Equiprobability Prior to 1500
- Open Forum
- Shadows in Medieval Optics, Practical Geometry, and Astronomy: On a Perspectiva Ascribed to Thomas Bradwardine
- The Southern Sky and the Renovation of the Ptolemaic Tradition in Sixteenth-Century Italian Astrologers
- The Concept of Changing Laws of Nature in the Baconian Corpus from 1597 to 1623
- Physico-theology: Religion and Science in Europe, 1650–1750, written by Ann Blair and Kaspar von Greyerz
- The Poison Trials: Wonder Drugs, Experiment, and the Battle for Authority in Renaissance Science, written by Alisha Rankin
- La Science prise aux mots: enquête sur le lexique scientifique de la Renaissance, edited by Violaine Giacomotto-Charra and Myriam Marrache-Gouraud
- La thériaque: Histoire d’un remède millénaire, edited by Véronique Boudon-Millot and Françoise Micheau
- A Wine a Day …: Medical Experts and Expertise in Plutarch’s Table Talk
- The Sciant artifices in the Work of Albert the Great: Towards Two Kinds of Transmutation?
- A Jumble of Writings: Commentaries on Aristotle’s De Longitudine et Brevitate Vitae Attributed to Adam of Buckfield
- Inquisitor as Physician: Friars, Inquisitors, Women, and Medical Knowledge in Early Colonial New Spain (1530–1650)
- Mechanica Medicina Sacra: Biblical Vegetarianism in Philippe Hecquet’s Theological Medicine
- From New Spain to Damascus: Ottoman Religious Authorities and the Making of Medical Knowledge on Tobacco
- Faith in Drugs: The Material and Immaterial Effects of Medication in the Early Modern French Catholic World
- Prayer and Physic in Seventeenth-Century England
- Medicine, God, and the Unseen in Eleventh/Seventeenth-Century Morocco
- Early Franciscans in England: Sickness, Healing and Salvation
- “Angelical Conjunctions”: An Introduction
- Women, Philosophy and Science: Italy and Early Modern Europe, edited by Sabrina Ebbersmeyer and Gianni Paganini
- Science without Leisure: Practical Naturalism in Istanbul, 1660–1732, written by Harun Küçük
- Descartes et la fabrique du monde: Le problème cosmologique de Copernic à Descartes, written by Édouard Mehl
- Thinking on Earthquakes in Early Modern Europe: Firm Beliefs on Shaky Ground, written by Rienk Vermij
- La magie naturelle, written by Jacques Lefèvre d’Étaples
- Kepler, rénovateur de l’optique, written by Gérard Simon
- Gender, Health, and Healing, 1250–1550, edited by Sara Ritchey and Sharon Strocchia
- The Experimental Fire: Inventing English Alchemy, 1300–1700, written by Jennifer M. Rampling
- Documenti e studi sulla tradizione filosofica medievale, edited by Amos Bertolacci and Gabriele Galluzzo
- Finally, a Monograph on Bruno’s De immenso!
- Characterisations in Britain of Isaac Newton’s Approach to Physical Inquiry in the Principia between 1687 and 1713
- Mechanism, Occasionalism and Final Causes in Johann Christoph Sturm’s Physics
- Princess Elisabeth’s Cautions and Descartes’ Suppression of the Traité de l’Homme
- Horoscopes of the Moon: Weather Prediction as Astrology in Ptolemy’s Tetrabiblos
- The Dawn of Scientific Biography
- The Colorless History of Pseudo-Aristotle’s De coloribus
- A Reply to the Four Reviewers
- How Important Was Religion to Newton’s “Secular” Studies?
- Response to Comments on Priest of Nature
- Theology in Newton’s Study of Alchemy, Chronology and Nature
- Towards a Comparative Perspective on Newton’s Working Methods
- Beyond a Boundary: Reflections on Newton the Historian, Theologian, and Alchemist
- Lessons for the Historian of Newtonian Mathematics
- Reassessing the Wider Aspects of Newton’s Thought – A Symposium
- Treasures of Knowledge: An Inventory of the Ottoman Palace Library (1502/3–1503/4), edited by Gülru Necipoğlu, Cemal Kafadar, and Cornell H. Fleischer
- A New Order of Medicine: The Rise of Physicians in Reformation Nuremberg, written by Hannah Murphy
- Medieval Meteorology: Forecasting the Weather from Aristotle to the Almanac, written by Anne Lawrence-Mathers
- Early Modern Biomechanism and Its Contemporary Relevance
- Giles of Lessines on Starlight and the Colour of the Sky
- Vernacular Cosmologies: Models of the Universe in Old English Literature
- Georg Bartisch’s Ophthalmodouleia and His Theory of Painting and Drawing
- What Did Hooke Want from the Microscope? Magnification, Matter Theory and Mechanism
- Contents to Volume 25 (2020)
- Self-knowledge, Perception, and Margaret Cavendish’s Metaphysics of the Individual
- Francis Bacon’s “Perceptive” Instruments
- Quantifications of the Secondary Qualities, Heat and Cold, on the Earliest Scales of Thermoscopes
- The Role of Sensory Qualities in Renaissance Natural History: The Case of Mattioli’s Herbal
- Introduction: Matter and Perception – Interactions between Metaphysics, Epistemology, and Natural Philosophy
- Enthusiasm and Platonic furor in the Origins of Cartesian Science: The Olympian Dreams
- Madness, Pain, & Ikhtilāṭ al-ʿaql: Conceptualizing Ibn Abī Ṣādiq’s Medico-Philosophical Psychology
- The Government of the Body: A Reconstruction of the Physiological Chapters in Nemesius of Emesa’s De natura hominis
- “Learn to Restrain Your Mouth”: Alchemical Rumours and their Historiographical Afterlives
- Experiment and Quantification of Weight: Late-Renaissance and Early Modern Medical, Mineralogical and Chemical Discussions on the Weights of Metals
- Experiments in the Making: Instruments and Forms of Quantification in Francis Bacon’s Historia Densi et Rari
- ‘The Curious Ways to Observe Weight in Water’: Thomas Harriot and His Experiments on Specific Gravity
- Johannes Kepler and the Exploration of the Weight of Substances in the Long Sixteenth Century
- Exploration and Experimentation on the Weight and Density of Substances in the Sixteenth and Early Seventeenth Centuries: Introduction
- Impotence and the Natural Explanation of Bewitchment: Wolfgang Reichart’s Medical Case Report on the Loss of “potentia coeundi”
- From Flanders to Lisbon to the Mughal Empire: Hendrick Uwens and the Mathematical Backstage of a Jesuit Missionary’s Life
- Hippocrate empiriste? Un idolum entre philosophie et praxis médicale (Du régime, I, 4)
- Continuous Time and Instantaneous Speed in the Works of William Heytesbury and Richard Swineshead
- Lichens in al-Biruni’s Kitab al-Saydanah fi al-Tibb
- Controversies over the Soul and its Origin
- George Berkeley’s Tar-water Medicine
- A Medieval European Value for the Circumference of the Earth
- Descartes’ Man Under Construction: The Circulatory Statue of Salomon Reisel, 1680
- Mechanism: A Visual, Lexical, and Conceptual History, written by Domenico Bertoloni Meli, 2019
- Chemins du cartésianisme, edited by Antonella Del Prete and Raffaele Carbone, 2017
- L’homme parfait: L’anthropologie médicale de Harvey, Riolan, et Perrault (1628-1688), written by Sarah Carvallo, 2017
- An Alchemical Quest for Universal Knowledge. The ‘Christian Philosophy’ of Jan Baptist Van Helmont (1579-1644), written by Georgiana D. Hedesan, 2016
- Astrolabes in Medieval Cultures, edited by Josefina Rodriguez-Arribas, Charles Burnett, Silke Ackermann, and Ryan Szpiech, 2019
- Drugs on the Page: Pharmacopoeias and Healing Knowledge in the Early Modern Atlantic World, edited by Matthew James Crawford and Joseph M. Gabriel, 2019
- Reproduction: Antiquity to the Present Day, edited by Nick Hopwood, Rebecca Flemming, and Lauren Kassell, 2018
- From the King’s Two Bodies to the People’s Two Bodies: Spinoza on the Body Politic
- The Political Thinker as a Civil Physician: Some Thoughts on Marsilius of Padua and Machiavelli beyond Leo Strauss’ al-Fârâbî
- The Body Politic Metaphor in Communal and Post-Communal Italy – Some Remarks on the Case of Lombardy
- The Body Politic from Medieval Lombardy to the Dutch Republic: An Introduction
- The Development of the Basil Valentine Corpus and Biography: Pseudepigraphic Corpora and Paracelsian Ideas
- Contents to Volume 24 (2019)
- Paracelsus, the Plague, and De Pestilitate
- The Astronomia Olympi novi and the Theologia Cabalistica: Two Pseudo-Paracelsian Works of the Philosophia Mystica (1618)
- Into the Forger’s Library: The Genesis of De natura rerum in Publication History
- Genealogy of Knowledge and Delegitimization of Universities: The Pseudo-Paracelsian Aurora Philosophorum
- The Philosophia ad Athenienses in the Light of Genuine Paracelsian Cosmology
- The Authenticity of Paracelsus’ Astronomia Magna and Brief an die Wittenberger Theologen: Towards a Diagnostic Rubric Clarifying Authentic and Spurious Elements in Paracelsus’ Oeuvre on the Basis of Theological Motifs
- Introduction Pseudo-Paracelsus: Forgery and Early Modern Alchemy, Medicine and Natural Philosophy
- Couleurs des urines et plantes tinctoriales dans le De Urinis Theophili: À propos du terme χυμένη
- Cosmology and Cosmic Order in Islamic Astronomy
- Air and Friction in the Celestial Region: Some medieval solutions to the difficulties of the Aristotelian theory concerning the production of celestial heat
- Astrological Debates in Italian Renaissance Commentaries on Aristotle’s Meteorology
- Pious Postmortems: Anatomy, Sanctity, and the Catholic Church in Early Modern Europe, written by Bradford A. Bouley, 2017
- Household Medicine in Seventeenth-Century England, written by Anne Stobart, 2016
- The Empirical Empire: Spanish Colonial Rule and the Politics of Knowledge, written by Arndt Brendecke, 2016
- The Pursuit of Harmony: Kepler on Cosmos, Confession, and Community, written by Aviva Rothman, 2017
- Mathematical Practitioners and the Transformation of Natural Knowledge in Early Modern Europe, edited by Lesley B. Cormack, Steven A. Walton, John A. Schuster, 2017
- Plato’s Persona: Marsilio Ficino, Renaissance Humanism, and Platonic Traditions, written by Denis J.-J. Robichaud, 2018
- Unpacking Recipes and Communicating Experience: The Ervarenissen of Simon Eikelenberg (1663-1738) and the Art of Painting
- Time on a Tablet: Early Ivory Sundials Incorporating Wax Writing Tablets
- Did Descartes Die of Poisoning?
- The Probabilistic Logic of Eusebius Amort (1692-1775)
- Ancient and Medieval Animals and Self-recognition: Observations from Early European Sources
- Three Eighteenth-Century Attempts to Map the Natural Order: Johann Herrmann – Georg Christoph Würtz – Paul Dietrich Giseke
- Sacred Medicine and the Bible: Thomas Bartholin’s On Biblical Diseases (1672)
- The Rise of the Concept of Laws of Nature Revisited
- Science and Religion
- Plant and Soil Chemistry in Seventeenth-Century England: Worsley, Boyle and Coxe
- Contents to Volume 23 (2018)
- Descartes’ Bio-Medical Study of Plants: Vegetative Activities, Soul, and Power
- Appetitive Matter and Perception in Ralph Austen’s Projects of Natural History of Plants
- Athanasius Kircher and Vegetal Magnetism: Analogy as a Method
- Spirits Coming Alive: The Subtle Alchemy of Francis Bacon’s Sylva Sylvarum
- Same Spirit, Different Structure: Francis Bacon on Inanimate and Animate Matter
- Touch Me Not: Sense and Sensibility in Early Modern Botany
- Manipulating Flora: Seventeenth-Century Botanical Practices and Natural Philosophy. Introduction
- written by Anna Winterbottom
- written by Robert S. Westman
- written by Florike Egmond
- edited by Gabriella Zuccolin
- edited by Marco Beretta, Maria Conforti, and Paolo Mazzarello
- written by Emmanuel Paschos and Christos Simelidis
- Reading Galileo in Conversation with Other Scholars
- Henry More and William Petty: Revisiting an Early Modern Polemic
- How to Accurately Account for Astrology’s Marginalization in the History of Science and Culture: The Central Importance of an Interpretive Framework
- Salerno’s Lombard Prince: Johannes ‘Abbas de Curte’ as Medical Practitioner
- Medical Martyrs: Nineteenth-Century Representations of Early Modern Inquisitorial Persecution of Spanish Physicians
- “Speaking with the Fire”: The Inquisition Confronts Mesoamerican Divination to Treat Child Illness in Sixteenth-Century Guatemala
- Medicine and the Inquisition in Portugal (Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries): People and Books
- Between Galen and St Paul: How Juan Huarte de San Juan Responded to Inquisitorial Censorship
- : Physicians Facing the Inquisition in Sixteenth-Century Venice
- Anatomy of a Scandal: Physicians Facing the Inquisition in Late Seventeenth-Century Rome
- The Heart of Heresy: Inquisition, Medicine, and False Sanctity
- The Mind of the Censor: Girolamo Rossi, a Physician and Censor for the Congregation of the Index
- Medicine and the Inquisition in the Early Modern World: Introduction
- , written by Miri Shefer-Mossensohn, 2015
- , edited by Karine Chemla, Renaud Chorlay and David Rabouin, 2016
- , written by Pablo Gómez, 2017
- , written by Anita Guerrini, 2015
- , written by Cathy McClive, 2015
- , written by Raz Chen-Morris, 2016
- , written by Johann Christoph Bürgel and Fabian Käs, 2016
- , written by Raphaële Andrault, 2016
- , written by Kellie Robertson, 2017
- Review Essay: Beyond Eurocentric Histories of Plague
- The ‘Do It Yourself’ Paradigm: An Inquiry into the Historical Roots of the Neglect of Testimony
- Lodewijk de Bils’ and Tobias Andreae’s Cartesian Bodies: Embalmment Experiments, Medical Controversies and Mechanical Philosophy
- The Nature of Blood: Debating Haematology and Blood Chemistry in the Eighteenth-Century Dutch Republic
- Models of Organic Organization in Montpellier Vitalism
- The Natural, the Pragmatic and the Moral in Kant’s Anthropology: The Case of Temperaments
- A Chemistry of Human Nature: Chemical Imagery in Hume’s
- Custom and Habit in Physiology and the Science of Human Nature in the British Enlightenment
- Resurrecting the Body Politic – Physiology’s Influence on Sir William Petty’s Political Arithmetick
- The Nature and Care of the Whole Man: Francis Bacon and Some Late Renaissance Contexts
- Introduction – Between Physiology and Ethics: The ‘Science of Man’ as a Middle-Range Discipline
- Documenting Medications: Patients’ Demand, Physicians’ Virtuosity, and Genre-Mixing of Prescription-Cases () in Seventeenth-Century China
- The Sublunary Phaenomena as a Subject of Medieval Academic Discussion: Meteorology and the Prague University
- A Reluctant Innovator: Graeco-Arabic Astronomy in the of Magister Cunestabulus (1175)
- Projectile Motion in a Vacuum According to Francesc Marbres, Francis of Marchia, Gerald Odonis, and Nicholas Bonet
- From Animal Bodies To Human Souls: (Pseudo-)Aristotelian Animals in Della Porta’s Physiognomics
- Food and Health in Early Modern Europe: Diet, Medicine and Society, 1450-1800, written by David Gentilcore
- Astrology and Reformation, written by Robin B. Barnes
- Contents to Volume 21 (2016)
- Richard Carew. The Examination of Men’s Wits, edited by Rocío Gutiérrez Sumillera
- Elegant Anatomy: The Eighteenth-Century Leiden Anatomical Collections, written by Marieke M.A. Hendriksen
- Adam Huber of Riesenpach (1545-1613) and his Translation of the Book on Regimen within the Context of the Prague Medical Milieu
- Justification of Anatomical Practice in Jessenius’s Prague Anatomy
- Homo Patiens, Approaches to the Patient in the Ancient World , edited by Georgia Petridou and Chiara Thumiger
- Plague and Empire in the Early Modern Mediterranean World: The Ottoman Experience, 1347-1600, written by Nükhet Varlik
- The Natural and the Human – Science and the Shaping of Modernity, 1739-1841, written by Stephen Gaukroger
- “The tempting girl, I know so well”: Representations of Gout and the Self-Fashioning of Bohemian Humanist Scholars
- The World of Plants in Renaissance Tuscany: Medicine and Botany (The History of Medicine in Context), written by Cristina Bellorini
- Ill Composed: Sickness, Gender, and Belief in Early Modern England, written by Olivia Weisser
- The Astronomer and the Witch: Johannes Kepler’s Fight for His Mother, written by Ulinka Rublack
- Sociable Knowledge: National History and the Nation in Early Modern Britain, written by Elizabeth Yale
- Cronache e statuti della prima Accademia dei Lincei. Gesta Lynceorum, «Ristretto» delle costituzioni, edited by Marco Guardo and Raniero Orioli
- Between the Renaissance and the Baroque: Philosophy and Knowledge in the Czech Lands within the Wider European Context: A Preface