Society of Catholic Scientists
Twelve Lectures on the Connexion between Science and Revealed Religion by Nicholas Patrick Wiseman (1837).
What Catholics Have Done for Science with Sketches of the Great Catholic Scientists by Martin S. Brennan (1887).
Catholic Scientists and Catholic Science by J. A. Zahm (1893).

Catholic Churchmen in Science: Sketches of the Lives of Catholic Ecclesiastics Who Were Among the Great Founders in Science first series by James J. Walsh (1906) – Copernicus / Astronomy (16th C.) ; Basil Valentine / Chemistry (16th C.) ; Linacre / Medicine (16th C.) ; Kircher (17th C.) ; Stenson (17th C.) ; Haüy (18th/19th C.) ; Mendel (19th C.)

Catholic Churchmen in Science second series by James J. Walsh (1909) – Albertus Manus (13th C.) ; John XXI (13th C.) ; Guy de Chauliac (14th C.) ; Regiomontanus (15th C.) ; Pioneers in Electricity (from 13th C.) ; Jesuit Astronomers (17th C.)

Old-Time Makers of Medicine by James J. Walsh (1911).

Twelve Catholic Men of Science by Bertram Windle (1912).

The Popes and Science by James J. Walsh (1913).
Catholic Churchmen in Science by James J. Walsh (1917) – Bacon (13th C.) ; Nicholas of Cusa (15th C.) ; Spallanzani (18th C.); Breuil (20th C.); Obermaier (20th C.)

Medieval Medicine by James J. Walsh (1920).

Makers of Modern Medicine by James J. Walsh (1915).





