Giovanni Camillo Glorioso

He criticised Chiaramonti's De tribus novis stellis and in 1636 Charamonti published a refutation, Examen censurae Gloriosi, to which Glorioso replied the following year Castigatio examinis.

To this Chiaramonti responded in turn with Castigatio Ioannis Camilli Gloriosi aduersus Scipionem Claramontium Caesenatem (1638).

As he died soon after, this allowed Chiaramonti the last word, which he took with a volume of more than 500 pages, summarising his Aristotelian positions on a wide range of topics, his Opus Scipionis Claramontis Caesenatis de Universo (1644).

[2] In contrast with Galileo, Glorioso shared Brahe's conclusion that comets were heavenly bodies, a position in agreement with our modern understanding.

[5] In his most important work, Exercitationum Mathematicarum Decades tres (1627-1639), he confutes the quadrature of the circle by Giambattista della Porta, comments on Viète, and gives the solution of interesting questions respecting the theory of numbers.

De cometis dissertatio astronomico-physica , Venice, Varisco, 1624