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The Legacy of Plato's <i>Timaeus</i>: Cosmology, Music, Medicine, and Architecture from Antiquity to the Seventeenth Century: Brill's Studies in Intellectual History, cartea 353

Editat de Jacomien Prins, Edmund Thomas
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 26 oct 2024
Plato’s Timaeus inspired a uniquely enduring interest across disciplines. In the centuries between its composition and the seventeenth century, scholars looked to this dialogue for answers to questions about the structure of the universe and how to live a healthy and happy life. They saw cosmology as vital to medicine and ethics; and, for them, harmony in music and architecture facilitated balance in the human soul. The Legacy of Plato’s Timaeus explores how the dialogue transformed the disciplines of cosmology, music, medicine, and architecture, and how new intellectual and cultural developments in turn shaped and re-contextualized interpretations of Plato’s ideas.

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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9789004431089
ISBN-10: 900443108X
Pagini: 472
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Brill's Studies in Intellectual History


Notă biografică

Jacomien Prins is a research fellow at Utrecht University. She has worked extensively on the interaction between music and philosophy in the Renaissance. Her work includes Echoes of an Invisible World: Marsilio Ficino and Francesco Patrizi on Cosmic Order and Music Theory (Brill, 2014), Sing Aloud Harmonious Spheres: Renaissance Conceptions of Cosmic Harmony (Routledge, 2017), The Routledge Companion to Music, Mind, and Well-being (Routledge, 2018).

Edmund Thomas is Associate Professor in Ancient Visual and Material Culture at Durham University and a former director of the Durham Centre for Classical Reception. He has published many works on the intellectual and cultural background of Greek and Roman architecture and the classical architectural tradition up to the present day, including Monumentality and the Roman Empire: Architecture in the Antonine Age (Oxford University Press, 2007).

Cuprins

Acknowledgements
List of Figures
Note on Translations, Editions, and Abbreviations
Notes on Contributors

1 Introduction: from Plato’s Text to the Beginnings of Modern Science – towards a New Understanding of the Disciplinary Inheritance of Plato’s Timaeus
Jacomien Prins and Edmund Thomas

PART 1: The Timaeus and its Reception in Late Antiquity


2 Mathematization in Plato’s Timaeus
Barbara M. Sattler

3 Towards the Quadrivium: the Role of the Timaeus in the Constitution of a Corpus of Mathematical Sciences
Federico M. Petrucci

4 Galen’s Timaeus
Robert Vinkesteijn

5 From Text to Building: the Impact of the Timaeus on the Discipline of Architecture in Later Antiquity
Edmund Thomas

PART 2: The Medieval Timaeus


6 The Reception of the Timaeus in Medieval Music Theory and Practice
Barbara Haggh-Huglo

7 Signum, Ordo, Machina: Nature in Twelfth-century Chartres, Paris and Bologna between Biblical Exegesis and Philosophical Heritage
Riccardo Saccenti

8 Curing Body and Soul with Plato’s Timaeus in the Eastern Roman Empire (284–1453)
Frederick Lauritzen

9 The Timaeus and Durham Cathedral
John Shannon Hendrix

PART 3: The Timaeus in the Renaissance


10 ‘Not for Irrational Pleasure’: Music in Marsilio Ficino’s Timaeus Commentary
Jacomien Prins

11 Saving the Phenomena: Geometric Atomism and the Timaeus in the Renaissance
Guy Claessens

12 Johannes Kepler and the Pythagoreans
Jonathan Regier

13 Vesalius and the Timaeus. The Anatomist’s Answer to the Philosopher
Jacqueline Vons

14 The Timaeus, Perspective, and Early Renaissance Concepts of Architectural Space
Nicholas Temple

Index