Caverni, Raffaello, Storia del metodo sperimentale in Italia, 1891-1900

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1which had for its motto a tercet of Dante, the one (Paradise, II, 94-96) in the
learned
canto on the lunar spots where Beatrice exalts Experimentation
which is the spring for the rivers of your arts. In the first part of the
Relazione, which displays the unmistakable style and spirit of Favaro, there
is
sincere praise and a warm appreciation of Caverni's monumental work.

However
, the relatore wants to make it clear (p.
12) that itdid not seem in
our
eyes altogether free of error. And thus begins that series of criticisms that
will
with time gather impetus, increasing and thundering like an avalanche.
As concerns the sources, it is said to be somewhat wanting in knowledge of
the
foreign ones, but this is the least of it; there is worse.
The work is found
to
reflecta tendency to be too easily infatuated with the novelty of the con­
clusions
, and there is the suggestion thatperhaps alarmed by the unjust
opinion
of those who wished to exalt Galileo to the prejudice of all his con­
temporaries
, he seems almost always on guard against conclusions unduly
favorable
to the supreme philosopher. And after some examples, for a few of
which
such reservations can be accepted, the committee concludes ingenuously,
And this we point out fully certain the author, asked to better ponder these
matters
, shall want to change his mind. Evidently they had not reckoned with
the
character of Prior Caverni (although it shows in every page of his Storia):
he
was, by general consensus, most pious, patient, and diligent in his ministry,
but
bizarre and touchy as a man, extremely proud and intolerant of any
restriction
of his liberty as a scholar.
In the brief memorial which he delivered on February 25, 1900 at the Reale
Istituto
Veneto, shortly after Caverni's death, Favaro says bitterly, “Such
criticism
, opportunely exemplified and applied, was not graciously received by
the
author.
Indeed, at the time of publication he increased the dose in the
passages
that had been pointed out to him.... And he is careful to note that
the five volumes [the sixth, uncompleted, was to appear posthumously that
year
] of the Storia del metodo sperimentale in Italia published by Caverni have
very
little in general and nothing in many places to do [sic] with the work
submitted
to the Institute and by it judged worthy of the prize. Favaro returned
to
this subject in 1907 in his essay Antichi e moderni detrattori di Galileo
(ancient and modern detractors of Galileo) published in the February 16th
issue
of La Rassegna Nazionale that year and written in answer toa tendency
to
renew Arago's accusations in different form, but with even greater acrimony,
with
the addition of new and numerous points (!) Although in the conclusion,
alluding
to Caverni, he recalls thatWe had promised ourselves not to lift the
veil
from this shabby display since it seemed to us only charitable to ignore the
outbursts
of a most great mind who let himself be led astray by personal motives
[his exclusion from the committee for the National Edition of the Works of
Galileo
] to the point of striking one of our most pure and genuine glories...,
he
had already aired his long repressed grievances.
The beginning of the seventh
paragraph
, which ends this essay, reads: “Except that it would be hardly tactful

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