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Bede: On the Nature of Things and On Times (Hardcover, New)
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Bede: On the Nature of Things and On Times (Hardcover, New)
Series: Translated Texts for Historians, 56
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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The Venerable Bede composed On the Nature of Things (De natura
rerum) and On Times (De temporibus) at the outset of his career,
about AD 703. Bede fashioned himself as a teacher to his people and
his age, and these two short works show him selecting, editing, and
clarifying a mass of difficult and sometimes dangerous material. He
insisted that his reader understand the mathematical and physical
basis of time, and though he was dependent on his textual sources,
he also included observations of his own. But Bede was also a
Christian exegete who thought deeply and earnestly about how
salvation-history connected to natural history and the history of
the peoples of the earth. To comprehend his religious mentality, we
have to take on board his views on "science" -- and vice versa. On
the Nature of Things is a survey of cosmology. Starting with
Creation and the universe as a whole, Bede reads the cosmos
downwards from the heavens, through the atmosphere, to the oceans
and rivers of earth. This order (recapitulating the four elements
or fire, air, water and earth) was derived from his main source,
Isidore of Seville's On the Nature of Things. However, Bede
separated out Isidore's chapters on time, and dealt with them in On
Times. On Times, like its "second, revised and enlarged edition"
The Reckoning of Time (De temporum ratione), works upwards from the
smallest units of time, through the day and night, the week, month
and year, to the world-ages. Bede's innovation is to introduce a
practical manual of Easter reckoning, or computus, into this
survey. Hidden beneath the matter-of-fact surface of the work is an
intense polemic about the correct principles for determining the
date of Easter -- principles which in Bede's view are bound up with
both the integrity of nature as God's creation, and the theological
significance of Christ's death and resurrection. In these works
Bede re-united cosmology and time-reckoning to form a unified
science of computus that would become the framework for Carolingian
and Scholastic basic scientific education.
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