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Old 09-06-2007, 01:52 AM   #231
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Amedo: What occurred was the advancement of Christian theology, which utilized the works of the Arab Avicenna and Averroes, and whatever of Greek philosophy they Arabs had brought into Europe, as well as the utilization of philosophy which the early Greek and Italian theologians had systematically made. The advanced learning of the Medieval clergy was not the education of the masses of people under under the Pope or under the Emperor.
I've read that Aquinas' Summa takes a lot of material from Ibn Sina -- without acknowledgement, of course.

Europeans owed a lot to those pesky Muslims!
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Old 09-06-2007, 02:17 AM   #232
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I've read that Aquinas' Summa takes a lot of material from Ibn Sina -- without acknowledgement, of course.
That is completely wrong. Aquinas and other medieval philosophers didn't just acknowledge Ibn Sina and Ibn Rushd, they revered them. And Aquinas cites and acknowledges Ibn Sina and other Muslim scholars regularly in his work, so I have no idea where you got your statement above from. I just did a quick skim through the first few sections of the Summa Theologica and rapidly found three references to "Avicenna" (Ibn Sina) without even trying.

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Europeans owed a lot to those pesky Muslims!
As they well knew. Statues of Ibn Sina and Ibn Rushd can be found on the walls of Medieval cathedrals alongside those of Aristotle and Plato.
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Old 09-06-2007, 02:20 AM   #233
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And Aquinas cites and acknowledges Ibn Sina and other Muslim scholars regularly in his work, so I have no idea where you got your statement above from. I just did a quick skim through the first few sections of the Summa Theologica and rapidly found three references to "Avicenna" (Ibn Sina) without even trying.
I stand corrected.

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Old 09-06-2007, 03:08 AM   #234
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I stand corrected.

Ray
Fun, eh? I find that I tend to learn the most here when I'm wrong. Peopll aren't hesitant to let you know!
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Old 09-06-2007, 03:15 AM   #235
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Indeedy!

I would be interested in a few of the Avicenna references from Aquinas' Summa, since the electronic version I'm looking through is missing them (or else I am).

My memory on such things is noticeably faulty, and anyway I've not read the full Summa, only bits and pieces on a rainy day.

Update: PopeInnocent just sent me a couple of references.

Ray
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Old 09-06-2007, 04:26 AM   #236
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Indeedy!


Update: PopeInnocent just sent me a couple of references.
That's Antipope to you. And you're very welcome.
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Old 09-06-2007, 08:49 AM   #237
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Your post, Amadeo:

Simply, a superb post.
A superb exercise in the re-definition of terms you mean. By the end of his post his rather weird definition of "the Renaissance" had been pushed all the way to the Tenth Century. If you wave your magic wand and redefine anything in the Middle Ages that you happen to like as "Renaissance", then it's hardly surprising if you end up with a glorious "Renaissance" that just happens to stretch back over about 500 years of the Medieval Period.

His post was superbly silly.
Well by such stretches of imagination of time that you propose, Aristotle sent men to the moon! Of course the present builds on the past, but you make Amadeo a black-and-white thinker, which he is not, it appears. He never said the middle ages were from venus and the renaissance from Mars, he's simply characterizing periods and justifying that characterization.

And yes, the periods are distinctive, even though our own has presidents sending crusades to the moorish east and the whole faith-based infidel-bashing crud. The more things change the more things stay the same, but this pretty much is the space age, preceeded by the age of colonization, preceeded by renaissance, preceeded by...
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Old 09-06-2007, 01:34 PM   #238
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Default Leonardo Da Vinci

I've been the library and looked up some biograohies of Leonardo, in particular, Charles Nicholl's of 2004. This concentrates on his writings rather than art so is relevant to our enquiry. I'd mention that Nicholls repeats the old saw about Vesalius and the inquisition without blushing so he may not be completely reliable.

Anyway, he says Leonardo's mirror writing "a strong psychological element of secrecy. We know he was continuously on guard against the pilfering of his ideas" (p. 58). Later we learn "he was plagued by fears, often justified, of piracy and plagiarism". (p. 96) Nicholls says that Leonardo's mirror writing started as a function of his left handedness, but that he could write normally when he felt like it. Other biographies echo this. I think this confirms what I wrote in my introduction.

I'd also mention a note that Leonardo claimed his anatomical studies were "hindered" by a professional rival who reported him to the pope and the local hospital during his last years in Rome. Nothing seems to have some of this, but Leonardo was guilty of obtaining bodies in underhand ways. This, rather than the dissections themselves, could have got him into trouble. Like today, unauthorised dissection outside the medical school was frowned on.

Interestingly, an artist was prosecuted and imprisonned in the UK for bodysnatching as recently as 1998:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/73463.stm
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/68877.stm



Best wishes

James
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Old 09-06-2007, 01:45 PM   #239
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I'd also mention a note that Leonardo claimed his anatomical studies were "hindered" by a professional rival who reported him to the pope and the local hospital during his last years in Rome. Nothing seems to have some of this, but Leonardo was guilty of obtaining bodies in underhand ways. This, rather than the dissections themselves, could have got him into trouble.
Consdering Leonardo was granted a license to dissect bodies in the Papal hospital in Rome by the Pope himself, the idea that dissecting would have got him in trouble with the Church is ridiculous. Especially since dissection had been going on with full Church sanction for at least 200 years before Leonardo anyway.
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Old 09-06-2007, 02:00 PM   #240
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Consdering Leonardo was granted a license to dissect bodies in the Papal hospital in Rome by the Pope himself, the idea that dissecting would have got him in trouble with the Church is ridiculous. Especially since dissection had been going on with full Church sanction for at least 200 years before Leonardo anyway.
In Rome Leonardo continued his anatomical studies, apparently at the Ospedale di Santo Spirito and as well carried on studies in distillation and physics, or more particularly optics. Unfortunately such studies appear to have brought him into conflict with a German mirror-maker known merely as Giovanni degli Specchi who seems to have been envious not only of Leonardo's influence with their common patron but as well of the considerably larger stipend that he received. As a result of the slanderous rumors which he spread, including suggestion of sacrilege in connection with Leonardo's anatomical studies, the latter found himself in papal disfavor and barred from Santo Spirito. Hence Leonardo terminated his anatomical studies.—Introduction to Leonardo on the Human Body (or via: amazon.co.uk).
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