Philosophy in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries

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A01=Constance Blackwell
A01=Sachiko Kusukawa
Accademia Degli Infiammati
Alain Segonds
anima
Annabel Brett
Aristotelian influence on Descartes and Hobbes
Aristotelian Text
Aristotle's Organon
Aristotle's Physica
Aristotle’s Organon
Aristotle’s Physica
Author_Constance Blackwell
Author_Sachiko Kusukawa
Book III
Category=QDHF
Charles H Lohr
Charlotte Methuen
Corpuscularian Natural Philosophy
Cursus Philosophicus
De Anima
De Caelo
Di Capoa
early modern logic
Eckhard Kessler
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
Grammatical Reading
Greek Commentators
Heikki Mikkeli
Ian Maclean
Jacob Schegk
Jacopo Zabarella
Jean Dietz Moss
Jesuit Aristotelianism
Jesuit science
Letizia Panizza
Loci Paralleli
Melanchthon's Natural Philosophy
metaphysics history
Nancy Struever
Nicholas Jardine
Paduan Academy
Paul Richard Blum
Pier Vettori
Pierre Lardet
Pietro Pomponazzi
Pope Paul III
Posterior Analytics
Prisca Theologia
Reformation intellectual history
Renaissance Aristotelianism
Renaissance humanism
Roger Ariew
Sachiko Kusukawa
Sarah Hutton
scholastic philosophy
Silvia Fazzo
Tom Sorell
Ugo Baldini
Ullrich Langer
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780860786689
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 28 Dec 1999
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This volume offers an important re-evaluation of early modern philosophy. It takes issue with the received notion of a ’revolution’ in philosophical thought in the 17th-century, making the case for treating the 16th and 17th centuries together. Taking up Charles Schmitt’s formulation of the many ’Aristotelianisms’ of the period, the papers bring out the variety and richness of the approaches to Aristotle, rather than treating his as a homogeneous system of thought. Based on much new research, they provide case studies of how philosophers used, developed, and reacted to the framework of Aristotelian logic, categories and distinctions, and demonstrate that Aristotelianism possessed both the flexibility and the dynamism to exert a continuing impact - even among such noted ’anti-Aristotelians’ as Descartes and Hobbes. This constant engagement can indeed be termed ’conversations with Aristotle’.
Constance Blackwell, Sachiko Kusukawa