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Sammelband of Six Aristotle Science Texts from the sixteenth century.
A truly striking pig blind stamped pigskin binding over wooden boards with a blind stamped image of Aristotle, with eight works of Aristotle on scientific subjects. All rare editions. 688J sammelband ARISTOTELES. Physicorum Aristotelis libri. [Of Physics]. Joanne Argyropylo & Francis. Vatablo interprete. Bound with: ARISTOTELES. De caelo libri quatuor. [Of Heaven]. I. Argyropylo interprete.…
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#Aristotle#CÆlo#De anima#De sensu & sensili#generatione et corruptione#Greek science#Lyon; A. Vicentium#Meteorologicorum#Natural history#Physicorum
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Happy September! This floriated initial S comes from De generatione et corruptione (1520) written by St. Thomas Aquinas.
#rare books#old books#16th century#1500s#science history#st thomas aquinas#letter s#floriated initial#decorated initial#september
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Manuscript Monday: Penn Library's LJS 453 - [Commentaries on Aristotle]. (Video Orientation)
Dot Porter, SIMS Curator of Digital Humanities, presents a Video Orientation to the University of Pennsylvania Library’s LJS 453, 15th-century copies of 13th- and 14th-century Hebrew translations of 12th-century commentaries by Averroës on scientific works attributed to Aristotle (De caelo, De mundo, De generatione et corruptione, Meteorologica) and a Hebrew translation of Aristotle’s Book 9 of…
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“…there is a sense in which the things that cause motion will touch the things they move and a sense in which they will not…the definition of ‘being in contact’ in general is applicable to things which have a position and are capable the one of moving and the other of being moved, whereas that of 'mutual contact’ is applicable to things capable of moving and being moved in which there is acting and being affected. The more usual case, indeed, is where a thing touches something which in turn touches it. Practically all the things we meet move while being moved, and in these cases it is necessary and indeed apparent that things touch things which in turn touches them. It is possible, though, as we sometimes say, doe the mover 'just to touch’ the thing moved, while the thing touched does not touch the thing that touches it…So if something moves something without being moved it will touch the thing moved, but nothing will touch it. After all, we say at times that a man who grieves us 'touches’ us, but we do not touch him." From Aristotle, On Generation and Corruption I.6 323a21-33.
Aristotle, De Generatione et Corruptione, translated with notes by C.J.F. Williams. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1982. Pages 22-23
Submitted by Amy L. Shuster on behalf of the Ohio Greek Reading Group.
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The Missing Petrus Roll
The second of the Vatican's two magnificent timelines by Peter of Poitiers has just arrived online at last. This is a big deal for the history of diagrammatic chronicles, an academic field which looks at how history was taught in medieval and early modern times. I will not introduce this art category again, as one click will take you to my post two weeks on this blog. A much-delayed book on the topic, Geschichte und Weltordnung, by Andrea Worm is due out soon. She uses the term "synoptic" for the timeline layout: What happens at the same time is laid out side by side. In the abstract below by me, you see columns respectively for chief priests, prophets, kings of Judah, of Israel and of foreign powers:
The two rolls offer a study in contrasts. Vat.lat.3782 of the late 13th century is tightly packed, more restrained in its colors, mainly black text and red figures, and has the sobriety of a 19th century architectural diagram. Here is the section matching the abstract above:
Vat.lat.3783 of the 14th century is jumpier. It generously uses blank space to order its sections, employs thinner lines, hurls more blues and golds into the diagram and presages a more 20th century style.
You'll find a long list of digitized versions of Petrus rolls (including these two) on my website, where the table can be rearranged in any order, including date, location, type and so on. Here is the full list of the week's 12 new releases:
Ross.2,
Vat.lat.2338,
Vat.lat.3004,
Vat.lat.3097 (Upgraded to HQ), Circa primum librum de generatione et corruptione notandum (15c); 3097
Vat.lat.3554 (Upgraded to HQ),
Vat.lat.3725,
Vat.lat.3735,
Vat.lat.3783, Compendium of Petrus Pictaviensis (above)
Vat.lat.3912 (Upgraded to HQ),
Vat.lat.3935,
Vat.lat.3939,
Vat.lat.3946,
This is Piggin's Unofficial List number 180. Thanks to @gundormr for harvesting. If you have corrections or additions, please use the comments box below. Follow me on Twitter (@JBPiggin) for news of more additions to DigiVatLib.
via Blogger https://ift.tt/2N45A0V
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Correio Braziliense Ciência mostra que a corrupção vai moldando áreas cerebrais de um indivíduo ao ponto de ele deixar de se constranger quando age de forma desonesta Acompanhando o homem em sua trajetória pela Terra, a corrupção continua atualíssima e, se na Antiguidade clássica intrigava filósofos como Aristóteles — autor de De generatione et corruptione …
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Sammelband of Six Aristotle Science Texts from the sixteenth century.
ARISTOTELES. Physicorum Aristotelis libri. [Of Physics]. Joanne Argyropylo & Francis. Vatablo interprete. Bound with: ARISTOTELES. De caelo libri quatuor. [Of Heaven]. I. Argyropylo interprete. 115, [21] pp. Printer’s device. Lyon; A. Vicentium, 1553 (ms. change to 1558).Bound with: ARISTOTELES. De generatione et corruptione libri duo. [Of the generation and corruption of books].F. Vatablo…
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A Very Fine Sammelband of Six Aristotle Science Texts from the sixteenth century.
ARISTOTELES. Physicorum Aristotelis libri. [Of Physics]. Joanne Argyropylo & Francis. Vatablo interprete. Bound with: ARISTOTELES. De caelo libri quatuor. [Of Heaven]. I. Argyropylo interprete. 115, [21] pp. Printer’s device. Lyon; A. Vicentium, 1553 (ms. change to 1558).Bound with: ARISTOTELES. De generatione et corruptione libri duo. [Of the generation and corruption of books].F. Vatablo…
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Ms. Codex 1153 - Tractatus De generatione et corruptione ad mentem subtilium ac theologorum omnium principis Ioannis Duns Scoti
This manuscript features two scholastic commentaries on Aristotle: the first on De generatione et corruptione; the latter on De anima. In between, there is a two-page work on the soul, apparently unconnected to either book, written in a different hand. The author of the two major works appears to be a proponent of John Duns Scotus. The title page includes two abbreviations, "C. D.F.R.M.D.C.C." and "B. L.N.D.F.C.M.," as well as a dedication. It was possibly written in Bologna, Italy, in 1650.
Do you want to know more? Click here - or here for the facsimile.
#Ms. Codex 1153#Aristotle#De anima#de generatione et corruptione#17th century#17th century manuscript#17th century italy#latin manuscript#italian manuscript#history of philosophy#van pelt library#kislak center#ms#university of pennsylvania
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LJS 482 - [Commentaries on De generatione et corruptione and Meteorologica]
Written in France, possibly Toulouse, between 1275 and 1299 CE, this manuscript features the commentaries on Aristotle's De generatione et corruptione and Meteorologica, by the Dominican friar Albertus Magnus (he is in the historiated initial!). Can you see the medieval annotations in the side margins?
If you want to know more, click here, or here for the facsimile.
#LJS 482#De generatione et corruptione#meteorologica#aristotle#albertus magnus#dominican friar#commentaries#french manuscript#13th century#sims#van pelt library#university of pennsylvania#kislak center#ms
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Happy Valentine’s Day from all of us a SIMS. We hope you have a lovely… wait, is that a dog? Ms. Codex 865, Analysis librorum Physicorum Aristotelis. [England], 1674-1675. p. xix. Lecture notes on Aristotle’s works of physical science, including De caelo, De generatione et corruptione, Meteorologica, and De anima, preceded by a compendium of geometry, and including a lovely sketch of a dog mounting a heart. #manuscript #17thc #valentines #dog #boydog https://instagr.am/p/CLRvwgxgKW9/
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Ms. Codex 865 - Analysis librorum Physicorum Aristotelis This manuscript features some lecture notes on Aristotle’s works of physical science, including De caelo, De generatione et corruptione, Meteorologica, and De anima, preceded by a compendium of geometry. It was possibly composed by Alexander Cunnighame in England, between 1674 and 1675 CE. (Post by Mario Sassi originally on Tumblr) #manuscript #England #17thc #geometry #historyofmathematics #historyofscience https://instagr.am/p/CLvP5tRjdVN/
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Ms. Codex 1129 - Disputationes...
This manuscript is the Disputationes in duos libros Aristotelis De ortu et interitu sive De generatione et corruptione: nec non de universa Metaphysica et morali philosophia eiusdem addito etiam tractatu de horologiis solaribus. Or, in other words, commentaries by Joannes Antonius on four works by Aristotle, discussing generation and corruption, second causes, free will, the soul, the being of the real and the impossible, and natural morality. It also includes instructions (with diagrams) for making a sundial. It was written in Genoa, in 1608, by Jacobus Maria Pesciettus.
Do you want to know more? Click here. Or here for the facsimile.
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Ms. Codex 865 - Analysis librorum Physicorum Aristotelis
This manuscript features some lecture notes on Aristotle's works of physical science, including De caelo, De generatione et corruptione, Meteorologica, and De anima, preceded by a compendium of geometry. It was possibly composed by Alexander Cunnighame in England, between 1674 and 1675 CE.
Click here for the facsimile, or here for additional information.
#Ms. Codex 865#Aristotle#history of philosophy#17th century#17th century manuscript#17th century england#english manuscipt#University of Pennsylvania#van pelt library#kislak center#ms
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toulouse
Perhaps!
Albertus Magnus, Commentaries on De generatione et corruptione and Meteorologica. Toulouse?, France, between 1275 and 1299 (Historiated Initial on fol. 27r)
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Happy Valentine’s Day from all of us a SIMS. We hope you have a lovely... wait, is that a dog?
Ms. Codex 865, Analysis librorum Physicorum Aristotelis. [England], 1674-1675. p. xix.
Lecture notes on Aristotle's works of physical science, including De caelo, De generatione et corruptione, Meteorologica, and De anima, preceded by a compendium of geometry, and including a lovely sketch of a dog mounting a heart.
It’s not on OPenn but it is on Penn in Hand.
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