Giordano Bruno and Renaissance ScienceCornell University Press, 1999 - 257 páginas The Renaissance philosopher Giordano Bruno was a notable supporter of the new science that arose during his lifetime; his role in its development has been debated ever since the early seventeenth century. Hilary Gatti here reevaluates Bruno's contribution to the scientific revolution, in the process challenging the view that now dominates Bruno criticism among English-language scholars. This argument, associated with the work of Frances Yates, holds that early modern science was impregnated with and shaped by Hermetic and occult traditions, and has led scholars to view Bruno primarily as a magus. Gatti reinstates Bruno as a scientific thinker and occasional investigator of considerable significance and power whose work participates in the excitement aroused by the new science and its methods at the end of the sixteenth century. Her original research emphasizes the importance of Bruno's links to the magnetic philosophers, from Ficino to Gilbert; Bruno's reading and extension of Copernicus's work on the motions of the earth; the importance of Bruno's mathematics; and his work on the art of memory seen as a picture logic, which she examines in the light of the crises of visualization in present-day science. She concludes by emphasizing Bruno's ethics of scientific discovery. |
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... idea of the world , even in its most humble material manifestations , as imbued with God - given life and intelligence . This di- vinization of matter , however , is an idea that Bruno applied rigorously throughout an infinite universe ...
... idea of the mortality of the individual soul put forward in his century by neo - Aristotelian natural philosophers such as Pietro Pom- panazzi.25 This idea seemed to him as negative as the Christian concept of a fully immortal soul ...
... idea of an ascent through the spheres of knowledge and an atomic philosophy of matter in an infinite universe which posited the idea of mind in the atomic minimum . The idea of " ascent " in Bruno thus becomes inevitably metaphorical in ...
Contenido
Discovering Copernicus | 29 |
The Ash Wednesday Supper | 43 |
De immenso et innumerabilibus | 78 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Giordano Bruno and Renaissance Science: Broken Lives and Organizational Power Hilary Gatti Vista previa limitada - 2002 |