, Brepols, 2021 Hardback, xlii + 319 pages, Size:156 x 234 mm, Illustrations:28 b/w, Language(s):Italian, English, German. ISBN 9782503594088.
Summary This volume is an homage to the great intellectual contribution made by Loris Sturlese to the field of history of medieval philosophy. Its point of departure lies in a methodological line, which Sturlese has maintained throughout his whole academic career: the importance in the historical and conceptual reconstruction of medieval philosophical thought of focusing not only on the classical, most famous centers of knowledge production and transmission, but also on the often-neglected peripheries, which during the Middle Ages were increasingly more relevant in propelling the circulation of texts and ideas. In this volume, the notions of 'center' and 'periphery' are not understood in a merely geographical sense, but also in conceptual, linguistic, historical and literary terms. The richness of this approach is demonstrated by the broad spectrum of the contributions, which range from Islamic philosophy to Italian Renaissance, including the reception of ancient philosophy and of Arabic scientific works in the Latin world, and up to eighteenth-century French geography. Special attention is devoted to the philosophical thought developed in the German area. The volume does not lack in giving space to important medieval figures, such as Dante, as well as to more general philosophical notions, such as the concept of rationality. The volume explores connections, ruptures, relations and affinities through the analysis of paradigmatic figures, places and topics within the micro- and macro-histories of philosophy. TABLE OF CONTENTS Nadia Bray, Diana Di Segni, Fiorella Retucci, Elisa Rubino, Introduction Loris Sturlese, Bibliography Ruedi Imbach, Ein nicht-existierender Gegenstand? Eine gelehrte und nichtsdestotrotz pers nliche Geschichte der Bochumer Schule (1971-1995) Carmela Baffioni, Il Linguaggio di Adamo, la Caduta di Adamo. Walter Benjamin alla luce di un inedito testo arabo medievale Luca Bianchi, L'aristotelismo vernacolare nel Rinascimento italiano: un fenomeno 'regionale'? Charles Burnett, Cleaning up the Latin Language in Mid-Sixteenth-Century Basel: Antonius Stuppa's purgation of Albohazen's De iudiciis astrorum Stefano Caroti, "Est autem testis Melissus pro cunctis temporis sui Philosophis, sed et pro omni antiquitate". Le metamorfosi di Melisso Giulio d'Onofrio, Dante dal centro al cerchio Onorato Grassi, Per l'edizione critica delle opere di Pietro Aureoli Mikhail Khorkov, Nicholas of Cusa's marginalia to Plato's dialogue Phaedrus as one of the forgotten sources of the supposed Cusanian Platonism Catherine K nig-Pralong, Centri, periferie, luoghi e percorsi. Jules Michelet versus Victor Cousin Freimut L ser, On the Margin. Some Notes on Meister Eckhart Pasquale Porro, Da Tommaso al tomismo. Napoli come centro filosofico nel Medioevo Valeria Sorge, Per una microstoria dell'umanesimo rinascimentale. Agostino Nifo e la cultura napoletana del Cinque-cento Andreas Speer, Die Universalit t der Vernunft und die Vielheit ihrer Sprachen Markus Vinzent, The Self-Location of Meister Eckhart Index