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This book explores the presence of Galen of Pergamon (129 - c. 216
AD) in early modern philosophy, science, and medicine. After a
short revival due to the humanistic rediscovery of his works, the
influence of the great ancient physician on Western thought seemed
to decline rapidly as new discoveries made his anatomy, physiology,
and therapeutics more and more obsolete. In fact, even though
Galenism was gradually dismissed as a system, several of his ideas
spread through the modern world and left their mark on natural
philosophy, rational theology, teleology, physiology, biology,
botany, and the philosophy of medicine. Without Galen, none of
these modern disciplines would have been the same. Linking
Renaissance with the Enlightenment, the eleven chapters of this
book offer a unique and detailed survey of both scientific and
philosophical Galenisms from the sixteenth to the late eighteenth
century. Figures discussed include Julius Caesar Scaliger,
Giambattista Da Monte, Hyeronimus Fabricius ab Aquapendente, Andrea
Cesalpino, Thomas Browne, Kenelm Digby, Henry More, Ralph Cudworth,
Robert Boyle, John Locke, Guillaume Lamy, Jean-Baptiste Verduc,
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, Christian Wolff, Julien Offray de La
Mettrie, Denis Diderot, and Kurt Sprengel.
This volume presents essays on Descartes by the pre-eminent Italian
historian of philosophy Emanuela Scribano, here translated into
English for the first time. Thematically cohesive in their focus on
what Scribano calls the nerve centers of Cartesian philosophy, they
examine Cartesian ideas in context, not only of Descartes'
philosophical contemporaries. These include Scholastic thinkers
such as Thomas Aquinas, Duns Scotus, and Suárez; Classical writers
such as Galen; authors contemporary to Descartes, such as
Campanella and Silhon; and philosophers who referred to Cartesian
philosophy, such as La Forge and Malebranche. By considering their
influence and contributions, it is possible to clarify some basic
theses of Cartesian philosophy and to answer some long-debated
questions in Descartes scholarship, pertaining to issues such as
the proof of God's existence, the free creation of eternal truths,
the hypothesis of divine deception, the limits of divine power, the
theory of animals as machines, the theory of error, and the
possible Cartesian origin of some central theses in Occasionalism.
The essays reflect Scribano's methodological approach: that to
understand the intent, scope, and meaning of a philosophical
theory, one must examine it with the eyes of those who share the
author's philosophical culture. Scribano provides a newly written
introduction, and the volume includes a foreword by Steven Nadler.
The European Enlightenment is a period that contributed concepts
that continue to be authoritative in philosophical conversation,
and defined the criteria for what is important in the endeavors of
human thought even in our own day. Descartes' Meditations on First
Philosophy presents the questions that are responsible for a
departure from Scholasticism and the dawn of modern philosophy. To
understand Continental Philosophy, and the history that precedes
the analytical tradition, one cannot overlook Descartes' precedent.
Even into the eighteenth century philosophical bearings were
considered a prerequisite to culture. But to understand the
transition of philosophy into the keeping of the universities, one
cannot sidestep Descartes' union of philosophy to science. But not
only this - in its beginnings, it must be noted that this chapter
of the Enlightenment contains one of the most meaningful
convergences of God and science. Despite the success or failure of
Descartes' conclusions of innate ideas and the undoubtability of
kmo God, the attempt and its commitments define a significant
displacement of both faith and reason (even mathematics) that
provides the context for recognizing, for example, the likes of
Kant and Newton in the fullness of their own projects. Emanuala
Scribano's guide to the reading of the Meditations is both a
critical treatment of the content of this text as well as an
historical overview of the philosophical climate and conversation
of Descartes' contemporaries. It is an accurate presentation of
Descartes' motivation and immediate influence on the culture, and
in particular those aspects which succeeded in altering theology,
philosophy, and physics simultaneously. Scribano provides rich
references to the Scholastic and Platonic traditions in order to
better characterize the way in which nuances of thought lead to
momentous shifts in general theory and the construction of
concepts. Descartes tries to found an untouchable science, but one
that also defends the existence of God. Hence, it is not enough to
look forward from Descartes, but also behind to the patrimony of
human enterprise in what regards satisfying the need of both gnosis
and episteme. Scribano's commentary is especially helpful for those
already familiar with Aquinas and Aristotle, as she employs
frequent juxtapositions between these and Descartes' divergences.
Beyond the general interest and scholarship, this book is
especially helpful for any liberal arts curriculum that engages
original text. It assists the reader in constructing the
progression and consequences of Descartes' thought and provides a
bibliography and notes that introduce the reader to the larger body
of Cartesian literature. Nevertheless, Scribano's emphasis is on
the concepts and notions proper to Descartes and the novelties of
his project. One might say she vindicates Descartes' attempt
without defending him. The reader is shown Descartes' positive
contribution well enough that he might disagree, or reconsider the
negative reputation of his work based solely on its consequences.
The book is accessible though not compromised in its clarity. It is
essential for students who seek to understand Descartes in all his
integrity and historical claims. As Scribano writes, "[Descartes']
is a strange adventure of human thought," and indispensable to a
comprehensive understanding of one of the most formidable trends in
human intellectual history.
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