Results for 'Iberian Peninsula'

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  1. Humanism in the iberian peninsula.Jeremy Nh Lawrance - 1990 - In Anthony Goodman & Angus MacKay (eds.), The Impact of Humanism on Western Europe. Longman.
  2.  12
    Phoenicians in the Iberian Peninsula and the Matter of Tartessos.Gonzalo Rubio - 2022 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 140 (1):219.
    In Greek and Roman sources, Tartessos designates a geographical area and a legendary kingdom that flourished in the southwest of the Iberian Peninsula between the eighth and seventh centuries BCE. For decades, much research on pre-Roman Iberia has gravitated around the nature of Tartessos as an historical or mythical polity, its possible location, and the archaeological identification of Tartessic material culture. It seems now increasingly clear that what the Greeks called Tartessos was inextricably linked to the presence of (...)
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  3.  7
    Ibn al-Kammād’s Muqtabis zij and the astronomical tradition of Indian origin in the Iberian Peninsula.Bernard R. Goldstein & José Chabás - 2015 - Archive for History of Exact Sciences 69 (6):577-650.
    In this paper, we analyze the astronomical tables in al-Zīj al-Muqtabis by Ibn al-Kammād (early twelfth century, Córdoba), based on the Latin and Hebrew versions of the lost Arabic original, each of which is extant in a unique manuscript. We present excerpts of many tables and pay careful attention to their structure and underlying parameters. The main focus, however, is on the impact al-Muqtabis had on the astronomy that developed in the Iberian Peninsula and the Maghrib and, more (...)
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  4.  16
    The Caliphate in the West: An Islamic Political Institution in the Iberian Peninsula.Olivia Remie Constable & David J. Wasserstein - 1995 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 115 (3):490.
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  5.  13
    Making fun of the atom: Humor and pleasant forms of anti‐nuclear resistance in the Iberian Peninsula, 1974–1984.Jaume Valentines-Álvarez & Ana Macaya-Andrés - 2019 - Centaurus 61 (1-2):70-90.
    In the mid-1970s, the fascist-leaning dictatorships in Spain (1939–1977) and Portugal (1933–1974) fell. Closely linked to the 1973 oil crisis, debates over energy and technology policies became very prominent during the ensuing political redefinition of both countries. Two decades after the first international agreements between the Iberian regimes and the United States for the development of nuclear programs, a myriad of movements of social resistance to nuclear technology emerged in dialogue with anti-nuclear organizations in other European countries. Fun and (...)
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  6.  25
    On Morphomic Defectiveness: Evidence from the Romance Languages of the Iberian Peninsula.Martin Maiden & Paul O'Neill - 2010 - In Defective Paradigms: Missing Forms and What They Tell Us. pp. 103.
    This chapter discusses the overall paradigmatic distribution of gaps in the Romance languages of the Iberian Peninsula. It revisits the Spanish data from a historical and comparative perspective, considering the closely related language, Portuguese. Ibero-Romance paradigm gaps are determined by the lexical rarity and the morphemic patterning. Paradigm gaps are also affected by ‘low speaker confidence’. This behaviour defines the avoidance of allomorphy even in the absence of reasonable grounds to expect the occurrence of allomorphy. Such behaviour is (...)
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  7. Evidencias del culto a Sabacio en la Península Ibérica = Evidences of the Sabazian cult in the Iberian Peninsula.Alejandra Guzmán Almagro - 2022 - In Coronel Ramos & Marco Antonio (eds.), Mito y realidad: investigaciones sobre el pensamiento dual en el mundo occidental. Berlin: Peter Lang.
     
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  8.  18
    Late Antique churches in the south-eastern Iberian Peninsula: The Problem of Byzantine Influence.María Ángeles Utrero Agudo - 2008 - Millennium 5 (1):191-212.
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  9.  8
    Many-Valued Logics in the Iberian Peninsula.Angel Garrido - 2018 - In Urszula Wybraniec-Skardowska & Ángel Garrido (eds.), The Lvov-Warsaw School. Past and Present. Cham, Switzerland: Springer- Birkhauser,. pp. 633-644.
    The roots of the Lvov-Warsaw School can be traced back to Aristotle himself. But in later times we better put them into thinking GW Leibniz and who somehow inherited many of these ways of thinking, such as the philosopher and mathematician Bernhard Bolzano. Since he would pass the key figure of Franz Brentano, who had as one of his disciples to Kazimierz Twardowski, which starts with the brilliant Polish school of mathematics and philosophy dealt with. Among them, one of the (...)
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  10. May-God-preserve-our-grain! An interpretation of bovine shoulder blades with Arabic inscriptions from excavated medieval deposits in the Iberian peninsula.A. Fernandez Ugalde - 1997 - Al-Qantara 18 (2).
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  11. A contribution to the study of the diffusion of Julius Honorius''Cosmografia'in the Iberian peninsula.M. Penelas - 2001 - Al-Qantara 22 (1):1-17.
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  12. Christian-arabic manuscripts from the Iberian Peninsula and North Africa: a historical interpretation.Peter Sjoerd van Koningsveld - 1994 - Al-Qantara 15 (2):423-452.
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  13. The Love Debate Tradition in the Reception of Gower's Confessio Amantis in the Iberian Peninsula.Grande Quejigo, Francisco Javier & Bernardo Santano Moreno - 2002 - In Disputatio 5: Medieval Forms of Argument: Disputation and Debate. pp. 103-126.
     
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  14. Al-Dhakhira al-saniyya: a relevant source on the 13th century in the Iberian Peninsula.Jose Ramirez-del-Rio - 2012 - Al-Qantara 33 (1):7 - 44.
  15. The treaties between Justinian and Athanagild and the legality of the Byzantine possessions on the Iberian peninsula.Margarita Vallejo Girves - 1996 - Byzantion 66 (1):208-218.
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  16.  29
    The study of the evolution of fruits preservation techniques in the iberian peninsula through the agronomic andalusian works, their Roman antecedents and posterior footprint in the renaissance.Ana M. Cabo-González - 2014 - Arabic Sciences and Philosophy 24 (1):139-168.
    RésuméDepuis les débuts de l'humanité, l'être humain s'est préoccupé de conserver les aliments en vue de les rendre plus longtemps comestibles. Au fil du temps, différentes méthodes pour préserver la nourriture ont été découvertes et perfectionnées, et ces techniques se trouvent décrites dans beaucoup d'œuvres. Ce travail décrit la connaissance des techniques de conservation qu'avaient les habitants de la péninsule ibérique ainsi que les développements qu'ils leur ont apportés. Il s'attache à étudier les divers procédés mis au point entre leieret (...)
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  17.  33
    Algebraic symbolism in the first algebraic works in the Iberian Peninsula.Fatima Romero Vallhonesta - 2012 - Philosophica 87 (4).
  18. A Channel of transmission of the classical during the high-middle-ages in Spain-umayyad influence on architecture and sculpture in the iberian peninsula between the middle of the 8th-century and the beginning of the 10th-century. 2. [REVIEW]L. Caballerozoreda - 1995 - Al-Qantara 16 (1):107-124.
     
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  19.  9
    José Chabás;, Bernard R. Goldstein. Astronomy in the Iberian Peninsula: Abraham Zacut and the Transition from Manuscript to Print. xii + 196 pp., illus., tables, bibl., index. Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society, 2000. [REVIEW]Emmanuel Poulle - 2003 - Isis 94 (2):366-367.
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  20.  20
    JOSÉ CHABÁS and BERNARD R. GOLDSTEIN, Astronomy in the Iberian Peninsula: Abraham Zacut and the Transition from Manuscript to Print. Transactions of the American Philosophical Society, 90, Part 2. Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society, 2000. Pp. xii+196. ISBN 0-87169-902-8 . No price given. [REVIEW]David Goodman - 2002 - British Journal for the History of Science 35 (2):213-250.
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  21.  62
    Miquel Crusafont, Anna M. Balaguer, and Philip Grierson, Medieval European Coinage, vol. 6, The Iberian Peninsula. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, 2013. Pp. xxxiii, 887; 136 black-and-white figures, 7 maps, and 41 tables. $269.99. ISBN: 978-0-521-26014-5. [REVIEW]James J. Todesca - 2015 - Speculum 90 (3):792-794.
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  22. “The Bright Initiator of Such a Great System.” Suárez and Fonseca in Iberian Jesuit Journals (1945–1975).Simone Guidi - 2023 - Noctua 10 (2–3):441-498.
    In this paper I focus on the historiographical fate of Francisco Suárez (1548–1617) and Pedro da Fonseca (1528–1599) in two Iberian journals ran by Jesuits and founded in 1945: the Spanish Pensamiento, and the Portuguese Revista portuguesa de filosofia. I endeavor to show that the discussions of Suárez’s and Fonseca’s ideas on these journal is a two-sided case of constructing the legacies of major figures in late scholasticism, and I emphasize how the demand to identify cultural national heroes intertwines (...)
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  23.  86
    Materiales para el estudio de la piedad popular fenicio-púnica en la Península Ibérica: la antroponimia.Jordi Vidal - 2003 - 'Ilu. Revista de Ciencias de Las Religiones 8:201-212.
    Tradicionalmente se ha considerado a la antroponimia como la vía prioritaria de acceso al conocimiento de la piedad popular en el marco de las culturas del Próximo Oriente Antiguo. Sin embargo, determinados problemas asociados a la utilización de este tipo de material limitan sus posibilidades. En el presente trabajo, junto a la recopilación de la antroponimia fenicio-púnica hallada en la Península Ibérica, se ha intentado proceder a su contextualización en el marco de la religión cananea del primer milenio y su (...)
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  24.  5
    Un precinto bilingüe de plomo de la conquista omeya de la península ibérica.Ruth Pliego & Tawfiq Ibrahim - 2021 - Al-Qantara 42 (2):15-15.
    This paper presents a hitherto unknown early Arabic-Latin bilingual lead seal depicting a peace pact. The similarities of the Latin signs on one of its faces with those found on a Visigothic monetary issue attributed to the city of Seville, lead us to suggest that this seal could be from the earliest phase of the Umayyad conquest of the Iberian Peninsula, and that it probably alludes to the first peace pact established by Mūsā b. Nuṣayr with that city.
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  25.  11
    La naturaleza de la natura: una apunte sobre mística y ciencia en el franciscanismo medieval de la Península Ibérica.Manuel Lázaro Pulido - 2018 - Scientia et Fides 6 (2):129-146.
    Nature of natura: un approach on mystic and science in peninsular Iberian medieval Franciscanism The present paper shows the relationship between the concepts Natura and Nature at Castillan Court and Franciscan Peninsular thinking on XIII century. Especially we study this distinction in Juan Gil de Zamora wisdom methodology of natural philosophy, equilibrating science, and mystical approach.
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  26.  44
    The Worlds of Positivism: A Global Intellectual History, 1770–1930.Johannes Feichtinger, Franz L. Fillafer & Jan Surman (eds.) - 2018 - Palgrave.
    This book is the first to trace the origins and significance of positivism on a global scale. Taking their cues from Auguste Comte and John Stuart Mill, positivists pioneered a universal, experience-based culture of scientific inquiry for studying nature and society—a new science that would enlighten all of humankind. Positivists envisaged one world united by science, but their efforts spawned many. Uncovering these worlds of positivism, the volume ranges from India, the Ottoman Empire, and the Iberian Peninsula to (...)
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  27. On Divine Foreknowledge: Part IV of the Concordia.Alfred J. Freddoso (ed.) - 1988 - Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
    Luis de Molina was a leading figure in the remarkable sixteenth-century revival of Scholasticism on the Iberian peninsula.
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  28.  12
    New perspectives on Byzantine Spain: the Discriptio Hispaniae.Jamie Wood, Ricard Andreu Expósito & Oriol Olesti Vila - 2018 - Journal of Ancient History 6 (2):278-308.
    The Discriptio Hispaniae is a passage from the Geometry of Gisemundus, also entitled Ars Gromatica Gisemundi, a medieval treatise of agrimensura written by an unknown author, probably a monk known as Gisemundus who had some agrimensorial experience. The work was compiled around AD 800 by collecting passages of a range of sizes, from just a few words to several pages, extracted from ancient and medieval sources. Although modern research into Roman agrimensorial texts has admitted the importance of the AGG, its (...)
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  29.  24
    On Divine Foreknowledge: Part IV of the Concordia.Luis de Molina - 1988 - Cornell Up.
    Luis de Molina was a leading figure in the remarkable sixteenth-century revival of Scholasticism on the Iberian peninsula. Molina is best known for his innovative theory of middle knowledge. Alfred J. Freddoso's extensive introductory essay clears up common misconceptions about Molina's theory, defends it against both philosophical and theological objections, and makes it accessible to contemporary readers.
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  30. An Introduction to Africana Philosophy.Lewis R. Gordon - 2008 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    In this undergraduate textbook Lewis R. Gordon offers the first comprehensive treatment of Africana philosophy, beginning with the emergence of an Africana consciousness in the Afro-Arabic world of the Middle Ages. He argues that much of modern thought emerged out of early conflicts between Islam and Christianity that culminated in the expulsion of the Moors from the Iberian Peninsula, and from the subsequent expansion of racism, enslavement, and colonialism which in their turn stimulated reflections on reason, liberation, and (...)
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  31.  5
    Quelques remarques sur l’origine des écritures coraniques arrondies en al-Andalus.Umberto Bongianino - 2017 - Al-Qantara 38 (2):153-187.
    This article focuses on the writing styles employed by the Andalusi calligraphers specialised in the production of Quranic manuscripts, between the 5th/11th and the 6th/12th centuries. During this crucial period, the shape, aspect, and concept of the muṣḥaf underwent a profound transformation in the Iberian Peninsula. In particular, the notion of “Quranic script” became more fluid, elusive even, mainly owing to the introduction of Maġribī round scripts for transcribing the Sacred Book. This article aims to demonstrate that all (...)
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  32.  10
    The European contexts of Ramism.Sarah Knight & Emma Annette Wilson (eds.) - 2019 - Turnhout: Brepols Publishers.
    The book situates the works and reception of the French scholar Pierre de la Ramée (Petrus Ramus) in a variety of European cultural and educational contexts, from Britain and France to Eastern Europe, from Germany to the Iberian peninsula, and from Scandinavia to the Netherlands. Pierre de la Ramée or Petrus Ramus (1515-1572) has long been a controversial figure in educational reform and innovation, from the moment of his first public academic statements in the 1530s, to his reception (...)
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  33. Una defensa de Robert Owen: para una nueva lectura del utopismo en la historia.José Ramón Álvarez Layna - 2007 - A Parte Rei: Revista de Filosofía 53 (53):1-76.
    ABSTRACT: In its historical deployment, socialist thought has attracted the attention of numerous experts and thinkers. The results reached from the above mentioned efforts, are quite irregular in fact. These studies are very often linked the marxist tradition, that shifted its identity to label previous social reformers as "utopian socialists". Specifically, our academic Spanish tradition has traditionally been dependant -historically and intellectually- on other Continental currents of thought. We state, that the preeminence and fundamental influence on our Spanish culture in (...)
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  34.  14
    Records and processes of dispute settlement in early medieval societies: Iberia and beyond.Isabel Alfonso Antón, José M. Andrade & André Evangelista Marques (eds.) - 2023 - Boston: Brill.
    How can dispute records shed light on the study of dispute settlement processes and their social and political underpinnings? This volume addresses this question by investigating the interplay between record-making, disputing process, and the social and political contexts of conflicts. The authors make use of exceptionally rich charter materials from the Iberian Peninsula, Italy, and Scandinavia, including different types of texts directly and indirectly related to conflicts, in order to contribute to a comparative survey of early medieval dispute (...)
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  35.  16
    Transmitting nautical and cosmographical knowledge in the 16th and 17th centuries: The case of Pedro Nunes.Bruno Almeida - 2018 - Centaurus 60 (3):216-229.
    While it is generally accepted that texts concerning navigation written by the Portuguese mathematician and cosmographer Pedro Nunes (1502–1578) were influential in erudite circles of Europe, less is known about the real impact and diffusion of his work among the less educated, such as professionals associated with sea voyages. Did Nunes' theoretical contributions reach the relevant artisans and practitioners? If so, how did this come about?This paper uses the case of Pedro Nunes to investigate how complex theoretical ideas were transmitted (...)
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  36.  11
    Veneración profética en el Reino Nazarí de Granada a través de la creación y la transmisión de obras de hadiz musalsal.Cristina de la Puente - 2021 - Al-Qantara 42 (1):09-09.
    This article focuses on some aspects of the prophetic veneration through a very specific sub-genre of ḥadīth literature, the so-called ḥadīth musalsal or chained prophetic transmission. Musalsal is the name given to the ḥadīth that in each of the links in the chain of transmission repeat identical expressions or sayings. Often, these expressions refer to a certain ritual or gesture that goes together with the delivery of the saying to the prophet. This article therefore deals with a ritualized transmission in (...)
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  37.  18
    O teo-politico na dominação colonial (Theo-politics of colonial domination) - DOI: 10.5752/P.2175-5841.2009v7n15p32.Eduardo Gusmão de Quadros - 2009 - Horizonte 7 (15):32-52.
    Este artigo pretende fundamentar o conceito teo-político na análise do regime colonial estabelecido na conquista da América. Estudando a construção do Padroado na península Ibérica, buscamos identificar como a crença, o poder, a doutrina eclesiástica e o direito civil estão articulados, tanto na Europa quanto no Novo Mundo. Com esse roteiro básico, chegamos ao estudo do Regalismo desenvolvido pelos pensadores ligados ao Estado. Demonstramos ainda que as idéias dos teólogos que pensaram a relação igreja e Estado no século XVIII não (...)
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  38.  10
    Spinoza: A Life (review).Elhanan Yakira - 2000 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 38 (1):123-124.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Journal of the History of Philosophy 38.1 (2000) 123-124 [Access article in PDF] Steven Nadler. Spinoza. A Life. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999. Pp. xiii + 407. Cloth, $34.95. Nadler's book is a comprehensive biography of Spinoza. It gives, within the limits of the information available, a full presentation of the life and personality of Spinoza; ample information about the different milieus in which Spinoza grew up and lived; (...)
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  39. The European Conscience and the Black Slave Trade: An Ambiguous Protest.Yves Bénot - 1997 - Diogenes 45 (179):93-109.
    At the turn of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, change was fast and furious: the exploration of coastal Africa by the Portuguese, the exploration of the West Indies by the Spanish, the extermination of the island Indians, the importation of black slaves to the Iberian peninsula, then the expansion of the slave trade to the American colonies - in short, the much-heralded inauguration of European colonization overseas, with all of its attendant horrors. All of this is adequately known, (...)
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  40.  19
    Christoph Meiners’ History of the Female Sex (1788–1800): The orientalisation of Spain and German nationalism.Lara Anderson & Heather Merle Benbow - 2009 - History of European Ideas 35 (4):433-440.
    This article investigates the portrayal of Spanish women in a rarely discussed work by the German popular philosopher Christoph Meiners (1747–1810). Between 1788 and 1800 Meiners wrote four substantial volumes titled History of the Female Sex: Comprising a View of the Habits, Manners, and Influence of Women, Among all Nations, from the Earliest Ages to the Present Time, which sought to give an account of the physical and moral qualities of women, and their treatment at the hands of men “at (...)
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  41.  56
    Abraham Ibn Ezra's scientific corpus basic constituents and general characterization.Shlomo Sela - 2001 - Arabic Sciences and Philosophy 11 (1):91-149.
    Abraham ibn Ezra's scientific corpus represented an exceptional case: instead of the common Latin model embodied by the scholar coming from the Christian North to the Iberian Peninsula to initiate a translation enterprise, we have in Ibn Ezra the contrary case of an intellectual imbued with the Arabic culture, who abandons al-Andalus, roams around the Christian countries and delivers in his wandering through Italy, France and England, the scientific and cultural cargo that he amassed during his youth in (...)
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  42.  17
    Shipwrecked Sovereignty.Yves Winter & Joshua Chambers-Letson - 2015 - Political Theory 43 (3):287-311.
    In 2007, a private corporation specializing in deep-sea salvage retrieved a treasure-laden shipwreck in international waters southwest of the Iberian Peninsula. The wreck was that of a Spanish warship that sunk during the Napoleonic wars. Following the discovery, a legal dispute arose in U.S. federal courts, between the corporate salvors, the Kingdom of Spain, and other litigants. At issue in the legal proceedings was the status of the shipwreck and whether it was protected by sovereign immunity. At the (...)
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  43. Metaphysics in the twelfth century: on the relationship among philosophy, science, and theology.Matthias Lutz-Bachmann, Alexander Fidora & Andreas Niederberger (eds.) - 2004 - Turnhout: Brepols Publishers.
    Although metaphysics as a discipline can hardly be separated from Aristotle and his works, the questions it raises were certainly known to authors even before the reception of Aristotle in the thirteenth century. Even without the explicit use of this term the twelfth century manifested a strong interest in metaphysical questions under the guise of «natural philosophy» or «divine science», leading M.-D. Chenu to coin the expression of a twelfth century «éveil métaphysique». In their commentaries on Boethius and under the (...)
     
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  44.  34
    Tafsīr and Translation: Traditional Arabic Qurʾān Exegesis and the Latin Qurʾāns of Robert of Ketton and Mark of Toledo.Thomas E. Burman - 1998 - Speculum 73 (3):703-732.
    It was a strange posthumous fate that awaited the Englishman Robert of Ketton : he was to be both best known and most strenuously criticized for a work that he surely viewed as a sideline to his own interests and career. By trade Robert was a Latin translator of Arabic scientific and mathematical works, one of those remarkable twelfth-century men who, as his contemporary Petrus Alfonsi put it, were willing “to traverse distant provinces and withdraw into remote regions so as (...)
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  45.  8
    Ein neues Konzept für Chirurgie in europäischen Hospitälern? Aufzeichnungen zu Praktiken in Deutschland, Italien und Spanien während des sechzehnten und frühen siebzehnten Jahrhunderts.Annemarie Kinzelbach & Florian Wieser - 2023 - NTM Zeitschrift für Geschichte der Wissenschaften, Technik und Medizin 31 (1):27-49.
    The recent discovery of a manuscript has allowed historians to understand the medical routine in a hospital known as the Schneidhaus in Augsburg between the sixteenth and nineteenth century. The context of the manuscript shows that at this institution, non-academic specialists, generally members of the guild of barber-surgeons and barbers, routinely performed surgical cures of intestinal hernia, scrotal swellings, and vesical calculus. The Schneidhaus exclusively admitted patients applying for such specialised treatments and offered no other services. Such a degree of (...)
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  46.  10
    Puella est domina sui corporis.Sven K. Knebel - 2022 - Studia Neoaristotelica 19 (2):177-220.
    Who owns the girl’s body, the parents, or the daughter herself? In Catholic casuistry, this issue has not only been occasionally touched upon, it has been topical among the commentators on Aquinas (STh II-II, q. 154, a. 6) from the 16th up to the 18th centuries. Nevertheless, modern scholarship ignores this big dispute. The distortion of early modern history in consequence thereof precludes a fair appraisal of the achievements of the Christian schools within the Habsburgian commonwealth. Whereas the Iberian (...)
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  47.  6
    "European Islam" or "Islam in Europe": two concepts in the context of European integration.YuM Kochubey - 2005 - Ukrainian Religious Studies 37:13-21.
    Speaking of Islam or Muslims, they have long been known in Western Europe, starting with the conquest of the Iberian Peninsula, the Mediterranean, the Battle of Guiatti. Later, there were the Crusades, the expansion of the Ottomans in the Balkans and Central Europe, the North African corsairs, and the colonial expansion of Europeans on Muslim land, in particular, under the Ottoman Empire.
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  48.  16
    John of St. Thomas [Poinsot] on Sacred Science: Cursus Theologicus I, Question 1, Disputation 2.John Of St Thomas - 2014 - South Bend, Indiana: St. Augustine's Press. Edited by John P. Doyle & Victor M. Salas.
    This volume offers an English translation of John of St. Thomas's Cursus theologicus I, question I, disputation 2. In this particular text, the Dominican master raises questions concerning the scientific status and nature of theology. At issue, here, are a number of factors: namely, Christianity's continual coming to terms with the "Third Entry" of Aristotelian thought into Western Christian intellectual culture - specifically the Aristotelian notion of 'science' and sacra doctrina's satisfaction of those requirements - the Thomistic-commentary tradition, and the (...)
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  49.  63
    Why Iberia?María Rosa Menocal - 2006 - Diacritics 36 (3/4):7-11.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Why Iberia?María Rosa Menocal (bio)My first instinct was to correct the title and rename this essay “Why Medieval Spain?” rather than “Why Iberia?” After all, I never say I work on or teach about “Iberia.” And yet the editors have got it just right to signal—using the geographic Iberia instead of the national Spain—that the terrible difficulty of finding worthy names is at the heart of the matter here, (...)
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    The Eclipse, the Astronomer and his Audience: Frederico Oom and the Total Solar Eclipse of 28 May 1900 in Portugal.Luís Miguel Carolino & Ana Simões - 2012 - Annals of Science 69 (2):215-238.
    Summary This study offers a detailed analysis of an episode of the popularization of astronomy which took place in Portugal, a peripheral country of Europe, and occurring in the early twentieth century. The episode was driven by the 28 May 1900 total solar eclipse which was seen on the Iberian Peninsula (Portugal and Spain). Instead of focusing on one of the ends of the popularization process, we analyze the circulation of knowledge among scientists and the public, contrast the (...)
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