Studies on Early Modern Aristotelianism.
In Studies in Early Modern Aristotelianism Paul Richard Blum shows the Aristotelian profile of modern philosophy. Philosophy, sciences mathematics, metaphysics and theology under Jesuit leadership mark the difference of subject-centered modernity from 'teachable' school philosophy.
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Leiden :
BRILL,
2012.
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Colección: | History of science and medicine library. Scientific and learned cultures and their institutions.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- List of Illustrations; Preface; Philosophy at Early Modern Schools; Chapter One Philosophers' Philosophy and School Philosophy; 1.1 Philosophy is as Philosophers Do; 1.2 Individual and Universal in Italian National Philosophy; 1.3 Neo-Scholasticism and Transcendental Truth; 1.4 Jesuit School Philosophy; 1.5 School Philosophy vs. Philosophers' Philosophy; Chapter Two Apostolato dei Collegi: On the Integration of Humanism in the Educational Program of the Jesuits; 2.1 Jacobus Pontanus on the Usefulness of the Humanities; 2.2 Organizing Public Education; 2.3 Studia humanitatis.
- 2.4 Scholastic HumanismChapter Three Philosophy at Early Modern Universities; 3.1 Structure and Heritage of Catholic Universities; 3.2 Teaching Metaphysics at the Jesuit Colleges in Germany in the Seventeenth Century; 3.3 The Ratio studiorum on Philosophy; Chapter Four Péter Pázmány: The Cardinal's Philosophy; 4.1 Pázmány as Professor of Philosophy; 4.2 Manuscripts; 4.3 Some Philosophical Themes; 4.4 The Plan of a Philosophical Textbook; Chapter Five Philosophy in Hungarian: Pál Bertalanffi SJ, Bernard Sartori OFM, and the Scholastic Philosophy of theEighteenth Century; 5.1 János Apáczai Csere.
- 5.2 Pál Bertalanffi SJ5.3 Bernard Sartori OFM; Science From The Renaissance Through The Enlightenment; Chapter Six Jesuits between Religion and Science; 6.1 God in Natural Philosophy; 6.2 Natural Theology; 6.3 Piety and Science; Chapter Seven Principles and Powers: How to Interpret Renaissance Philosophy of Nature Philosophically?; 7.1 Cusanus and Ficino: Reasonable Questions behind Obscure Answers; 7.2 Telesio: Is there any Order in Nature?; 7.3 Cardano: The Unity of Nature and of its Explanation; 7.4 Strategical Uniformity in Creating Theories; 7.5 From Universality to Specialization.
- Chapter Eight The Jesuits and the Janus-Faced History of Natural Sciences8.1 Father Clavius's Complaints: Mathematics in the Jesuit Curriculum; 8.2 The Unity of Human Episteme; 8.3 Experiments with the Philosophy Course: Melchior Cornaeus S.J.; 8.4 The Story of Science; Chapter Nine Benedictus Pererius:Renaissance Culture at the Origins of Jesuit Science; 9.1 Pererius and Averroes; 9.2 Pererius and Renaissance Philosophy; 9.3 The Role of Metaphysics within Philosophy; 9.4 Concessions to Platonism; 9.5 History of Philosophy against the Myth of Ancient Wisdom; 9.6 Against Alchemy and Kabbalah.
- 9.7 Dreams and Clairvoyance9.8 Astrology; Chapter Ten "Ubi natura facit circulos in essendo, nos facimus in cognoscendo." The Demonstrative Regressus and the Beginning of Modern Science in Catholic Scholastics; 10.1 Scholastic and Cartesian Logic; 10.2 Franciscus Toletus; 10.3 French Contexts; 10.4 Franciscans; Chapter Eleven Aristotelianism More Geometrico: Honoré Fabri; 11.1 A Key to Aristotelianism; 11.2 Space: A Universal Concept; 11.3 Excursus on Natural Theology; 11.4 Hypothesis--Founded or Fictitious?; Metaphysics and Theology.