Results for 'Art, Renaissance Philosophy'

973 found
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  1.  11
    The art of philosophy: visual thinking in Europe from the late Renaissance to the early enlightenment.Susanna Berger - 2017 - Princeton: Princeton University Press.
    Apin's cabinet of printed curiosities -- Thinking through plural images of logic -- The visible order of student lecture notebooks -- Visual thinking in logic notebooks and Alba amicorum -- The generation of art as the generation of philosophy.
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  2.  57
    The Art of Philosophy: Visual Thinking in Europe from the late Renaissance to the Early Enlightenment, by Susanna Berger.Roger Ariew - 2018 - Mind 127 (508):1219-1229.
    © Mind Association 2018Some time ago I was at the Bibliothèque Nationale in Paris investigating the teaching of philosophy during Descartes’ time. Fine monographs had already been published on the various regimens and practices at Descartes’ college at La Flèche, and Jesuit institutions in general, as well as the collegiate curriculum in seventeenth-century France. But as interested as I was in the form of the teaching—how philosophy was taught, where, and when—I was more interested in its content—what was (...)
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  3.  11
    The Art of Philosophy: Visual Thinking in Europe from the Late Renaissance to the Early Enlightenment[REVIEW]Eileen Reeves - 2018 - Isis 109 (4):837-838.
  4.  26
    The Evolution of A. Durer's Aesthetic views in the Context of Renaissance Philosophy.Nikolai Adrianovich Bagrovnikov & Marina Fedorova - 2022 - Философия И Культура 6:18-46.
    The article investigates the peculiarities of Durer's aesthetic views in the context of Renaissance philosophy and the theory of cognition of Modern times. Its provisions are compared with fragments of texts by L.-B. Alberti, Leonardo da Vinci, Raphael. The semantic interrelationships of Durer's positions with mysticism, pantheism, natural philosophy and empiricism of Modern Times are emphasized. The interrelation of the problem of knowledge with the theme of freedom and beauty is considered in detail. The authors analyze various (...)
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  5.  16
    The Individual and the Cosmos in Renaissance Philosophy.Mario Domandi (ed.) - 1963 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    This provocative volume, one of the most important interpretive works on the philosophical thought of the Renaissance, has long been regarded as a classic in its field. Ernst Cassirer here examines the changes brewing in the early stages of the Renaissance, tracing the interdependence of philosophy, language, art, and science; the newfound recognition of individual consciousness; and the great thinkers of the period—from da Vinci and Galileo to Pico della Mirandola and Giordano Bruno. _The Individual and the (...)
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  6.  23
    BERGER, SUSANNA. The Art of Philosophy: Visual Thinking in Europe from the Late Renaissance to the Early Enlightenment. Princeton University Press, 2017, 352 pp., 30 color + 169 b&w illus., $65.00 cloth. [REVIEW]Thomas E. Wartenberg - 2018 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 76 (2):258-260.
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  7.  40
    Renaissance Ideas and the Idea of the RenaissanceThe Cambridge History of Renaissance Philosophy.Renaissance Humanism: Foundations, Forms and Legacy. Volume 1: Humanism in Italy. Volume 2: Humanism Beyond Italy. Volume 3: Humanism and the Disciplines.Supplementum Festivum: Studies in Honor of Paul Oskar Kristeller.Renaissance Studies in Honor of Craig Hugh Smyth. Volume I: History, Literature, Music. Volume II: Art, Architecture.Marsilio Ficino e il ritorno di Platone: Manoscritti, stampe e documenti.Marsilio Ficino e il ritorno di Platone: Studi e documenti. [REVIEW]Charles Trinkaus, Quentin Skinner, Eckhard Kessler, Charles B. Schmitt, Albert Rabil, James Hankins, John Monfasani, Frederick Purnell, Andrew Morrogh, Fiorella Superbi Gioffredi, Piero Morselli, Eve Borsook, S. Gentile, S. Niccoli, P. Viti & Gian Carlo Garfagnini - 1990 - Journal of the History of Ideas 51 (4):667.
  8.  30
    Distributed Cognition in Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy.Miranda Anderson & Michael Wheeler (eds.) - 2019 - Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
    Reveals the diverse ways that cognition was seen as spread over brain, body and world in the 9–17th centuries - The second book in an ambitious 4-volume set looking at distributed cognition in the history of thought - Includes essays on literature, philosophy, law, art, music, medicine, science and material culture - For students and scholars in medieval and Renaissance studies, cognitive humanities and philosophy of mind - Draws out what was distinctive about medieval and Renaissance (...)
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  9.  13
    Renaissance & Renascences in Western Art.Erwin Panofsky - 2019 - Almqvist & Wiksell.
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  10. Deconstructing the Animal-Human Binary: Recent Work in Animal Studies: Review of Elephant Slaves and Pampered Parrots: Exotic Animals in Eighteenth-Century Paris by Louise E. Robbins, Experimenting with Humans and Animals: From Galen to Animal Rights by Anita Guerrini, Figuring Animals: Essays on Animal Images in Art, Literature, Philosophy, and Popular Culture, edited by Mary Sanders Pollock and Catherine Rainwater, Renaissance Beasts: Of Animals, Humans, and Other Wonderful Creatures, edited by Erica Fudge, Romanticism and Animal Rights by David Perkins, Savages and Beasts: The Birth of the Modern Zoo by Nigel Rothfels, and Zoontologies: The Question of the Animal, edited by Cary Wolfe. [REVIEW]Frank Palmeri - 2006 - Clio: A Journal of Literature, History, and the Philosophy of History 36 (1):407-420.
     
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  11. Art and natural-science in the renaissance, ancient philosophy in France, festivals and philosophy in the renaissance.E. Garin - 1988 - Rivista di Storia Della Filosofia 43 (1):121-129.
  12.  12
    Ficino and fantasy: imagination in Renaissance art and theory from Botticelli to Michelangelo.Marieke van den Doel - 2021 - Boston: Brill.
    Did the Florentine philosopher Marsilio Ficino (1433-99) influence the art of his time? Art historians have been fiercely debating this question for decades. This book starts with Ficino's views on the imagination as a faculty of the soul, and shows how these ideas were part of a long philosophical tradition and inspired fresh insights. This approach, combined with little known historical material, offers a new understanding of whether, how and why Ficino's Platonic conceptions of the imagination may have been received (...)
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  13.  51
    Renaissance Thought and the Arts: Collected Essays.Paul Oskar Kristeller - 1980 - Princeton University Press.
    Written by an eminent authority on the Renaissance, this collection of essays focuses on topics such as humanist learning, humanist moral thought, the diffusion of humanism, Platonism, music and learning during the early Renaissance, and ...
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  14.  5
    Cambridge Translations of Renaissance Philosophical Texts 2 Volume Paperback Set: Moral and Political Philosophy.Jill Kraye (ed.) - 1997 - Cambridge University Press.
    The Renaissance, known primarily for the art and literature that it produced, was also a period in which philosophical thought flourished. This two-volume anthology, which was originally published in 1997, contains forty translations of important works on moral and political philosophy written during the Renaissance and hitherto unavailable in English. The anthology is designed to be used in conjunction with The Cambridge History of Renaissance Philosophy, in which all of these texts are discussed. The works, (...)
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  15.  75
    Philosophy and Humanism. Renaissance Essays in Honor of Paul Oskar Kristeller. [REVIEW]F. W. J. - 1979 - Review of Metaphysics 33 (2):436-438.
    This Festschrift in Professor Kristeller’s honor consists of contributions by scholars who have had some connection with Columbia University, his "intellectual home in the United States for three decades." It also includes a Tabula Gratulatoria listing many other friends from the United States and Europe. The editor’s opening essay provides an interesting and informative account of this scholar’s academic career, and should be read together with the complete annotated bibliography of his publications through 1974. The latter lists 149 "major publications" (...)
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  16.  22
    Brunelleschi's egg: nature, art, and gender in Renaissance Italy.Mary D. Garrard - 2010 - Berkeley, Calif.: University of California Press.
    Introduction -- Great Mother Nature -- The gendering of nature as female : from prehistory through the Middle Ages -- Nature and art in the Quattrocento : from pupil to equal -- Technology and the mastery of physical nature : Brunelleschi and Alberti -- Genesis and the reproduction of life : Masaccio and Michelangelo -- The rebirth of Venus and the feminization of beauty : Botticelli -- A balance of power : pictorial metaphors for nature in transition -- Nature's special (...)
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  17. Cambridge Translations of Renaissance Philosophical Texts: Volume 1, Moral Philosophy: Moral and Political Philosophy.Jill Kraye (ed.) - 2012 - Cambridge University Press.
    The Renaissance, known primarily for the art and literature that it produced, was also a period in which philosophical thought flourished. This two-volume anthology contains 40 new translations of important works on moral and political philosophy written during the Renaissance and hitherto unavailable in English. The anthology is designed to be used in conjunction with The Cambridge History of Renaissance Philosophy, in which all of these texts are discussed. The works, originally written in Latin, Italian, (...)
     
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  18.  65
    Natural Philosophy in Renaissance Italy: the University of Bologna and the Beginnings of Specialization.David A. Lines - 2001 - Early Science and Medicine 6 (4):267-320.
    In the Italian universities, there was traditionally a strong alliance between natural philosophy and medicine, which however was all to the advantage of the latter; its teachers were better regarded and better paid than others in the faculty of Arts and Medicine, and this led to career paths that sought out the teaching of medicine as soon as possible. This article examines a reversal of this trend observable in sixteenth-century Bologna and some other Italian universities , leading to careers (...)
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  19.  85
    Educating For Silence: Renaissance Women and the Language Arts.Joan Gibson - 1989 - Hypatia 4 (1):9-27.
    In the Renaissance, educating for philosophy was integrated with educating for an active role in society, and both were conditioned by the prevailing educational theories based on humanist revisions of the trivium. I argue that women's education in the Renaissance remained tied to grammar while the education of men was directed toward action through eloquence. This is both a result of and a condition for the greater restriction on the social opportunities for women.
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  20.  7
    Kann das Denken malen?: Philosophie und Malerei in der Renaissance.Inigo Bocken & Tilman Borsche (eds.) - 2010 - München: Fink.
  21.  23
    Iconology, Neoplatonism, and the Arts in the Renaissance.Berthold Hub & Sergius Kodera - 2020 - Routledge.
    The mid-twentieth century saw a change in paradigms of art history: iconology. The main claim of this novel trend in art history was that renown Renaissance artists created imaginative syntheses between their art and contemporary cosmology, philosophy, theology and magic. The Neo-Platonism in the books by Marsilio Ficino and Giovanni Pico della Mirandola became widely acknowledged for their lasting influence on art. It thus became common knowledge that Renaissance artists were not exclusively concerned with problems intrinsic to (...)
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  22.  23
    Concepts of Beauty in Renaissance Art.Francis Ames-Lewis & Mary Rogers - 2019 - Routledge.
    In this Volume, published in1998, Fifteen scholars reveal the ways of preserving, conceiving and creating beauty were as diverse as the cultural influenced at work at the time, deriving from antique, medieval and more recent literature and philosophy, and from contemporary notions of morality and courtly behaviour. Approaches include discussion of contemporary critical terms and how these determined writers' appreciation of paintings, sculpture, architecture and costume; studies of the quest to create beauty in the work of artists such as (...)
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  23.  6
    Leonardo da Vinci, Art and worldview of the Renaissance genius.Juan Carlos Mansur Garda - 2024 - Ideas Y Valores 73 (185):163-187.
    This article explains the philosophy of Leonardo da Vinci, who through his writings, designs and pictorial work, shows a tension and rupture on the art, beauty and truth of his time. Painting is scientific and therefore a liberal art, but it does not manifest the sacred truth of the icon of the medieval finalist worldview, but it will be the scientific truth of Modernity.
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  24.  1
    Retrogession in Art and the Suicide of the Royal Academy: Part the Second; the Coming Renaissance, with an Outline of a New Philosophy of Life and of Art.E. Wake Cook - 1924 - Hutchinson.
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  25.  12
    Renaissance Thought and its Sources.Michael Mooney (ed.) - 1979 - Cambridge University Press.
    Renaissance Thought and Its Sources presents the fruits of an extraordinary lifetime of scholarship: a systematic account of major themes in Renaissance philosophy, theology, science, and literature, show in their several settings. Here, in some of Paul Oskar Kristeller's most comprehensive and ambitious writings, is an exploration of the distinctive trends and concepts of the Renaissance, grounded in detailed historical investigation.All of these fourteen essays were originally delivered as lectures. Part One identifies the classical sources of (...)
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  26. Shifting the paradigm of philosophy of science: Philosophy of information and a new renaissance[REVIEW]Gordana Dodig-Crnkovic - 2003 - Minds and Machines 13 (4):521-536.
    Computing is changing the traditional field of Philosophy of Science in a very profound way. First as a methodological tool, computing makes possible ``experimental Philosophy'' which is able to provide practical tests for different philosophical ideas. At the same time the ideal object of investigation of the Philosophy of Science is changing. For a long period of time the ideal science was Physics (e.g., Popper, Carnap, Kuhn, and Chalmers). Now the focus is shifting to the field of (...)
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  27.  6
    Tugenden und Affekte in der Philosophie, Literatur und Kunst der Renaissance.Joachim Poeschke, Thomas Weigel & Britta Kusch-Arnhold (eds.) - 2002 - Münster: Rhema.
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  28.  52
    Cambridge translations of Renaissance philosophical texts.Jill Kraye (ed.) - 1997 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    The Renaissance, known primarily for the art and literature that it produced, was also a period in which philosophical thought flourished. This two-volume anthology contains 40 new translations of important works on moral and political philosophy written during the Renaissance and hitherto unavailable in English. The anthology is designed to be used in conjunction with The Cambridge History of Renaissance Philosophy, in which all of these texts are discussed. The works, originally written in Latin, Italian, (...)
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  29.  9
    Tugenden und Affekte in der Philosophie, Literatur und Kunst der Renaissance.Joachim Poeschke, Thomas Weigel & Britta Kusch (eds.) - 2002 - Münster: Rhema.
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  30.  9
    The aesthetics of grace: philosophy, art, and nature.Raffaele Milani - 2013 - New York: Peter Lang.
    In The Aesthetics of Grace: Philosophy, Art, and Nature, Raffaele Milani traces the fascinating history of the idea of 'grace' from ancient times to the 1700s. Although this term has been displaced by other concepts with the advent of modernism and postmodernism, the complex ideas related to the notion of 'grace' remain an important aesthetic category, and Milani presents an impressive panorama of reflections on and interpretations of the subject. The subtitle of the work indicates the broad scope of (...)
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  31.  7
    Cusano: l'arte e il moderno.Gianluca Cuozzo - 2021 - Brescia: Morcelliana.
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  32.  6
    Renaissance du philosophe-artiste: essai sur la révolution visuelle de la pensée.Bruno Cany - 2014 - Paris: Hermann.
    Ce livre repart de la notion nietzschéenne de "philosophe-artiste" pour s'en désolidariser aussitôt. Certes, la philosophie-artiste, qui se caractérise par l'indissociabilité de la pensée et de la vie et par l'hétérogénéité de ses discours, est le mode mineur du philosopher depuis Platon. Mais, à sa conception musicale encore partagée par Nietzsche, l'auteur oppose une conception visuelle de la pensée, qui prend sa source conceptuelle dans l'oeuvre de Giorgio de Chirico, inventeur de la peinture métaphysique. Dans un second temps, ce livre (...)
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  33.  9
    From Plato to Postmodernism: The Story of the West Through Philosophy, Literature and Art.Christopher Watkin - 2011 - London: Bloomsbury.
    From Plato to Postmodernism presents the cultural history of the West in one concise volume. Nearly four thousand years of Western history are woven together into an unfolding story in which we see how movements and individuals contributed to the philosophy, literature and art that have shaped today's world. The story begins with the West's Greco-Roman and Judeo-Christian origins, moving through the Middle Ages, Renaissance, Enlightenment and Romanticism to twenty-first century postmodernity. The author covers key figures such as (...)
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  34.  4
    The Nude in the renaissance: Unveiling the world and revealing human dignity.Émilie Séris - forthcoming - Diogenes:1-18.
    The humanist theory of the nude is one of the places where what can be called a ‘poor metaphysics’ developed during the Renaissance. To construct the concept of the nude as a representation of man in his own right, art theorists used common scholastic categories such as substance and accident, form and matter, potentiality and actuality, quantity and quality, whole and part, soul and body. Resolutely poor in its object – the human body, the work of art – and (...)
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  35.  74
    Renaissance thought and its sources.Paul Oskar Kristeller - 1979 - New York: Columbia University Press. Edited by Michael Mooney.
    The U.S. occupation of Japan transformed a brutal war charged with overt racism into an amicable peace in which the issue of race seemed to have disappeared.
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  36.  8
    Les liens de la métamorphose: philosophie et magie de la Renaissance et l'âge classique.Saverio Ansaldi - 2017 - Paris: Éditions Kimé.
    Cet ouvrage interroge le sens de la relation entre lien magique et métamorphose en essayant de dégager des perspectives philosophiques et politiques spécifiques à la Renaissance et à l'âge classique. La pensée de Giordano Bruno demeure dans cette optique une référence essentielle. Le philosophe nolain n'a de cesse de réfléchir sur le sens de cette relation, puisque c'est à travers elle qu'il construit aussi bien l'art de la mémoire que la pratique magique comme art du lien. Des thèmes comme (...)
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  37.  6
    La Renaissance de la critique: l'essor de l'humanisme érudit de 1560 à 1614.Jean Jehasse - 1976 - Saint-Étienne: Publications de l'Université de Saint-Étienne.
    The rediscovery of the ancient conception of criticism by the great humanist authors triggered an intellectual revolution that renewed the traditional liberal arts. This reference work analyzes the evolution of scholarly reflection in Europe in the second half of the sixteenth century.
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  38.  9
    Renaissance et ascensions de l'âme: de la lanterne à la lune, de la lune au soleil.Evelien Chayes (ed.) - 2019 - Paris: Classiques Garnier.
    Les essais de ce recueil étudient les différentes représentations de l'ascension de l'âme dans des sources anciennes et prémodernes, de Platon à Pierre Charron, en passant par la patristique grecque, l'iconographie byzantine, les théologiens chrétiens médiévaux, les philosophes et peintres catholiques de la Renaissance et les kabbalistes juifs du XVIe siècle. Ainsi, ce livre forme un répertoire détaillé des manières dont ont été imaginées à travers les siècles les vacations de l'âme après sa séparation du corps. Comment se représenter (...)
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  39. Art and Phenomenology.Joseph Parry (ed.) - 2010 - Routledge.
    Philosophy of art is traditionally concerned with the definition, appreciation and value of art. Through a close examination of art from recent centuries, _Art and Phenomenology_ is one of the first books to explore visual art as a mode of experiencing the world itself, showing how in the words of Merleau-Ponty ‘Painting does not imitate the world, but is a world of its own’. An outstanding series of chapters by an international group of contributors examine the following questions: Paul (...)
     
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  40.  30
    Belting, Hans., Florence and Baghdad, Renaissance Art and Arab Science.Reed Armstrong - 2013 - Review of Metaphysics 67 (1):151-152.
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  41.  18
    "Nature and Art in Renaissance Literature," by E. W. Tayler. [REVIEW]James Collins - 1966 - Modern Schoolman 43 (3):318-319.
  42.  12
    Res et Verba in der Renaissance.Eckhard Kessler & Ian Maclean (eds.) - 2002 - Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz in Kommission.
    Aus dem Inhalt: I. Maclean, Introduction M.J. B. Allen, In principio: Marsilio Ficino on the Life of Text D. Perler, Diskussionen uber mentale Sprache im 16. Jahrhundert E. Kessler, Die verborgene Gegenwart und Funktion des Nominalismus in der Renaissance-Philosophie: das Problem der Universalien A. De Pace, Copernicus against a Rhetorical Approach to the Beauty of the Universe. The Influence of the Phaedo on the De revolutionibus H. Mikkeli, Art and Nature in the Renaissance Commentaries and Textbooks on Aristotle's (...)
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  43.  65
    The judgment of sense: Renaissance naturalism and the rise of aesthestics.David Summers - 1987 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    'ith the rise of naturalism in the art of the late Middle Ages and the Renaissance there developed an extensive and diverse literature about art which helped to explain, justify, and shape its new aims. In this book, David Summers provides an original investigation of the philosophical and psychological notions invoked in this new theory and criticism. From a thorough examination of the sources, he shows how the medieval language of mental discourse derived from an understanding of classical thought. (...)
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  44.  33
    The Art to End All Arts.Claes Entzenberg - 2013 - Nordic Journal of Aesthetics 23 (46).
    The death of art has been a notion used in connection with the development and progress of art. This view of the development of art, the movement from one position to another, can go on forever. From another view, we see art as part of a narration, which makes the death of art absolute and final, even though art is still produced. In our time, the American philosopher A. C. Danto uses Hegel’s developmental view on history to explain pictorial Western (...)
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  45.  27
    The Position of Aesthetics in the Early Renaissance and the Philosophy of Marsilio Ficino.Alicja Kuczyńska - 2018 - Dialogue and Universalism 28 (1):61-76.
    Thee paper presents Marcilio Ficino’s aesthetics which is of a specific kind and differs from what we usually understand under the term. It expresses more than only thoughts on beauty and art, speaks about more than only the varieties of beauty, and deals with more than just the work of art—the object of art—and its relation to beauty. Traditional concepts played an important part in Ficino’s aesthetics, but alongside narrowly understood “proper” aesthetics, he offered another, very broad view of the (...)
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  46.  6
    Firstlight: from the Renaissance to romanticism in Europe and the Pacific.Luke Strongman - 2015 - New York: Nova Publishers.
    The chapters of this book discuss in differing ways the transition in the second millennium of the Common Era from the Renaissance, through Enlightenment and subsequently, Romanticism, with a focus in Europe and the Pacific from the fifteenth to the nineteenth centuries. The book highlights salient features of each movement, using examples from the lives and works of critical exponents of each artists, poets, playwrights, philosophers, engineers, navigators, and explorers. The aim has been to impart knowledge of each period, (...)
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  47.  72
    Studies in Iconology, Humanistic Themes in the Art of the Renaissance[REVIEW]Paul A. Underwood - 1940 - Philosophical Review 49 (5):584-586.
  48.  13
    Science, Art and Nature in Medieval and Modern Thought.A. C. Crombie - 2003 - Hambledon.
    Contents Acknowledgements vii Illustrations ix Preface xi Further Bibliography of A.C. Crombie xiii 1 Designed in the Mind: Western visions of Science, Nature and Humankind 1 2 The Western Experience of Scientific Objectivity 13 3 Historical Perceptions of Medieval Science 31 4 Robert Grosseteste 39 5 Roger Bacon [with J.D. North] 51 6 Infinite Power and the Laws of Nature: A Medieval Speculation 67 7 Experimental Science and the Rational Artist in Early Modern Europe 89 8 Mathematics and Platonism in (...)
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  49.  3
    Filosofie van het licht: twee traktaten van Marsilio Ficino.Hendrik Gerhard Schipper - 2022 - 's-Hertogenbosch: Gompel & Svacina.
    De humanist Marsilio Ficino (1433-1499) was een van de meest invloedrijke filosofen van de Italiaanse renaissance. Zijn wijsbegeerte is van groot belang geweest voor kunstenaars als Botticelli en Michelangelo. Dit boek besteedt uitvoerige aandacht aan Ficino's invloed op artistiek gebied. Fundamentele studies van Chastel, Panofsky en Gombrich passeren daarbij de revue. Ook de rol van de familie De' Medici in Ficino's professionele en persoonlijke leven wordt uiteengezet. Zo ontstaat een veelzijdig en samenhangend beeld van het milieu van de Platonisten (...)
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  50.  8
    L'art victime de l'esthétique.Carole Talon-Hugon - 2014 - Paris: Hermann.
    Dans la langue courante comme dans les textes specialises, l'adjectif - esthetique - est aujourd'hui volontiers utilise comme un parfait synonyme d' - artistique -, comme si la valeur de l'art tenait tout entiere dans la valeur esthetique. Tel est le paradigme esthetique de l'art qui s'est mis en place entre la Renaissance et le XVIIIeme siecle et a, depuis lors, vectorise l'histoire des arts en Occident. Or cette assimilation est doublement reductrice: d'une part parce que l'experience esthetique deborde (...)
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