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Et Amicorum: Essays on Renaissance Humanism and Philosophy: in Honour of Jill Kraye [Kõva köide]

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  • Formaat: Hardback, 460 pages, kõrgus x laius: 235x155 mm, kaal: 873 g
  • Sari: Brill's Studies in Intellectual History 273
  • Ilmumisaeg: 07-Dec-2017
  • Kirjastus: Brill
  • ISBN-10: 9004355014
  • ISBN-13: 9789004355019
  • Formaat: Hardback, 460 pages, kõrgus x laius: 235x155 mm, kaal: 873 g
  • Sari: Brill's Studies in Intellectual History 273
  • Ilmumisaeg: 07-Dec-2017
  • Kirjastus: Brill
  • ISBN-10: 9004355014
  • ISBN-13: 9789004355019
Jill Kraye, Professor Emerita of the Warburg Institute, is renowned internationally for her scholarship on Renaissance philosophy and humanism. This volume pays tribute to her achievements with essays by friends, colleagues, and doctoral studentsall leading scholarson subjects as diverse as her work. Articles on canonical figures such as Marsilio Ficino and Justus Lipsius mix with more quirky pieces on alphabetic play and the Hippocratic aphorisms. Many chapters seek to bridge the divide between humanism and philosophy, including David Lines's survey of the way fifteenth-century humanists actually defined philosophy and Brian Copenhaver's polemical essay against the concept of humanist philosophy. The volume includes a full bibliography of Professor Kraye's scholarly publications.

Contributors are: Michael Allen, Daniel Andersson, Lilian Armstrong, Stefan Bauer, Dorigen Caldwell, Brian Copenhaver, Martin Davies, Germana Ernst, Guido Giglioni, Robert Goulding, Anthony Grafton, James Hankins, J. Cornelia Linde, David Lines, Margaret Meserve, John Monfasani, Anthony Ossa-Richardson, Jan Papy, Michael Reeve, Alessandro Scafi, and William Stenhouse.

Arvustused

"This book contains many excellent essays that cannot all be discussed in the scope of a book review: instead this review could only offer tantalizing samples and an invitation to dine at a table at a feast worth attending."





Andrew L. Thomas, Salem College, in The Sixteenth Century Journal I.4, pp. 1220-1222









important and timely [ ] this is a very rich volume of contributions whose center is represented by a thorough reconsideration of the question of humanism in relation to philosophy.





Massimo Lollini, University of Oregon. In: Renaissance Quarterly, Vol. 72, No. 3 (Fall 2019), pp. 1113-1114.

Foreword xi
List of Illustrations
xii
1 Jill Kraye: The History of Philosophy as a Humanistic Discipline
1(6)
Anthony Grafton
PART 1 Humanism and its Reception
2 The Unpolitical Petrarch: Justifying the Life of Literary Retirement
7(26)
James Hankins
3 Lauro Quirini and His Greek Manuscripts: Some Notes on His Culture
33(14)
John Monfasani
4 Translating Aristotle in Fifteenth-Century Italy: George of Trebizond and Leonardo Bruni
47(22)
J. Cornelia Linde
5 Illuminated Copies of Plutarchus, Vitae illustrium virorum, Venice: Nicolaus Jenson, 1478: New Attributions, New Patrons
69(49)
Lilian Armstrong
6 A Roman Monster in the Humanist Imagination
118(26)
Margaret Meserve
7 Tau's Revenge
144(15)
Anthony Ossa-Richardson
8 A Knowing Likeness: Artists and Letterati at the Farnese Court in mid Sixteenth-Century Rome
159(18)
Dorigen Caldwell
9 Greek Antiquities and Greek Histories in the Late Renaissance
177(21)
William Stenhouse
10 Against `Humanism': Pico's Job Description
198(47)
Brian Copenhaver
PART 2 Renaissance Philosophy and its Antecedents
11 Acquiring Wings: Augustine's Recurrent Tensions on Creation and the Body
245(17)
Alessandro Scafi
12 The Florilegium Angelicum and `Seneca', De moribus
262(19)
Michael Reeve
13 Defining Philosophy in Fifteenth-Century Humanism: Four Case Studies
281(17)
David A. Lines
14 Marsilio Ficino on Power, on Wisdom, and on Moses
298(15)
Michael J. B. Allen
15 `If you Don't Feel Pain, you Must Have Lost your Mind': The Early Modern Fortunes of a Hippocratic Aphorism
313(25)
Guido Giglioni
16 Life in Prison: Cardano, Tasso and Campanella
338(17)
Germana Ernst
17 Five Versions of Ramus's Geometry
355(33)
Robert Goulding
18 Justus Lipsius as Historian of Philosophy: The Reception of the Manuductio ad stoicam philosophiam (1604) in the History of Philosophy
388(36)
Jan Papy
19 Can History be Rational?
424(11)
Stefan Bauer
20 A Crayon for Jill
435(4)
Daniel Andersson
The Publications of Jill Kraye, 1979--2017 439(10)
Martin Davies
Index 449
Anthony Ossa-Richardson, Ph.D. (2011), Warburg Institute, is a Lecturer in English Literature at the University of Southampton. His first monograph, based on his doctoral thesis, was The Devil's Tabernacle: The Pagan Oracles in Early Modern Thought (2013), and he has published a range of articles and book chapters on various aspects of early modern intellectual history.

Margaret Meserve, Ph.D. (2001), Warburg Institute, is Associate Professor of History at the University of Notre Dame. She is the author of Empires of Islam in Renaissance Historical Thought (2008) and has published widely on Renaissance humanism, book history, and political communication.