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In the crucible of intellectual change that took place in the seventeenth century, the role of Samuel Hartlib was of immense significance. Hartlib (originally from Elbing) settled in England permanently from the late 1620s until his death in 1662. His aspirations formed a distinctive and influential strand in English intellectual life during those revolutionary decades. This volume reflects the variety of the theoretical and practical interests of Hartlib's circle and presents them in their continental context.
Samuel Hartlib was a key figure in the intellectual revolution of
the seventeenth century. Originally from Elbing, in Prussig,
Hartlib settled permanently in England from the late 1620s until
his death in 1662. His aspirations formed a distinctive and
influential strand in English intellectual life during those
revolutionary decades. This volume reflects the variety of the
theoretical and practical interests of Hartlib's circle and
presents them in their continental context. The editors of the
volume are all attached to the Hartlib Papers Project at the
University of Sheffield, a major collaborative research effort to
exploit the largely untapped resources of the surviving Hartlib
manuscripts. In an introduction to the volume they explore the
background to the Hartlib circle and provide the context in which
the essays should be read.
Thomas Hobbes claimed to have founded the discipline of civil
philosophy (political science). The claim did not go uncontested
and in recent years the relationship of philosophical reasoning to
rhetorical persuasion in Hobbes's work has become a significant
area of discussion, as scholars attempt to align his disparaging
remarks about rhetoric with his dazzling practice of it in works
like Leviathan. The dominant view is that, having rejected an early
commitment to humanism and with it rhetoric when he adopted the
'scientific' approach to philosophy in the late 1630s, Hobbes later
came to re-embrace it as an essential aid to or part of philosophy.
Philosophy, Rhetoric, and Thomas Hobbes proposes that Hobbes was,
from first to last, dubious about the place of rhetoric in civil
society, and came to see it as a pernicious presence within
philosophy - a position from which he did not retreat. It offers a
fresh and expanded picture of Hobbes's humanism by examining his
years as a country house tutor; his teaching and his translation of
Thucydides, the influence on him of Bacon, and the range of his
early natural historical and philosophical interests. In
demonstrating the distinctively Aristotelian character of his
understanding of rhetoric, the book also revisits the new approach
to philosophy Hobbes adopted at the end of the 1630s, clarifying
the nature and scope of his concern about the contamination of
philosophy and political life by the procedures of rhetorical
argumentation.
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