Descripción
Bound in attractive contemporary blind-stamped calfskin over thin wooden boards, with floral tools and rolls of urns. Text possibly re-cased. Somewhat later end-papers. Internally fine. Title page a little dusty, light marginal damp-stain in gathering t, small tear in inner margin of final leaf. The text is printed in italic, with passages in Greek. Illustrated with eight woodcut diagrams, including maps of the Ptolemaic world (p. 110) and the solar system (p. 73); and the world divided into five climate zones. There are several large and fine woodcut initials. Soter s woodcut device appears on the title page. This edition is a reprint of the one edited by the German humanist Arnoldus Vesaliensis (1484-1534) published in Cologne in 1526 by Eucharius Cervicornus. Arnold of Wesel, linguist, poet, and philosopher, taught at Cologne University. A canon of Cologne Cathedral, Arnold was present at the Diet of Augsburg (1530). MACROBIUS: Written in the late fourth or early fifth century, during the twilight years of Roman paganism, Macrobius' "Saturnalia" and "Commentary on the Dream of Scipio" are two of the last works produced in antiquity that present us with an intellectual and cultural vision that ignores Christianity altogether. In the "Saturnalia" we have a Neoplatonic symposium, held by a group of highly cultured interlocutors dining together during the pagan festival of year's-end. The conversations are wide-ranging, with weighty discussions of religion, philosophy, and literature (above all the works of Vergil), balanced by jokes, talk of the pleasures of wine, the price of fish, the question of how far an insult can go and still be funny, and matters of digestion. The Saturnalia itself (its origins, the worship of Saturn, etc.) is also discussed, as are other pagan religious festivals. The Neoplatonist Cosmos: Commentary on the Dream of Scipio: The "Somnium Scipionis" (Scipio s Dream) originally constituted Book VI of Cicero s "De Republica", a discourse now mostly lost. The "Dream" was preserved and circulated separately in late antiquity, thanks in large part to Macrobius, who wrote a cosmological commentary on the "Dream." Cicero cast his work in the form of a Platonic dialogue, in which the main interlocutors are Scipio Aemilianus (Scipio Africanus the Younger) and the ghosts of his father, Aemilianus Paullus, and grandfather, Scipio Africanus the Elder. The ghosts foretell the young Scipio s future, instructing him to be just and dutiful toward his country as the surest way of achieving heaven. The ghosts then take the young Scipio to "a high place full of stars, shining and splendid" where they reveal to him the organization of the cosmos, emphasizing the contrast between earthly temporality and the eternity of the cosmos. In expounding the workings and nature of the universe, Scipio s grandfather, "tells him that there is life after death and introduces him to the perfect numbers seven and eight (numbers whose meanings were attributed by contemporary Greek mathematicians to Pythagoras.) He goes on to show Scipio the nine spheres that make up the universe. Eight of them, he says, revolve at extremely high speeds, emitting seven tones that form an extraordinarily harmonious musical chord. This chord is inaudible to humans, but they nevertheless try to imitate it with the seven strings of the lyre and in song. This description is the earliest known of the harmony of the spheres."(Joost-Gaugier, "Measuring Heaven", p. 28) "Possessed of a finely tuned sensibility for the signifying value of Cicero's dream-text, Macrobius exploited the text's cryptic images in order to display the philosophical erudition of the Neoplatonic tradition… "According to Macrobius, an entire Neoplatonic encyclopedia lay encoded in Cicero's 'Dream'. Because Cicero hinted at 'profound truths… with amazing brevity, concealing his deep knowledge of things beneath a concise form of expression,' Macrobius took as his task the patient unfolding of th. N° de ref. del artículo 4782
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