Optics, ethics, and art in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries : looking into Peter of Limoges's Moral treatise on the eye / edited by Herbert L. Kessler and Richard G. Newhauser ; with the assistance of Arthur J. Russell.
- Date:
- [2018]
- Books
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"This volume examines afresh the various ways in which the introduction of ancient and Arabic optical theories transformed thirteenth-century thinking about vision, how scientific learning came to be reconciled with theological speculation, and the effect these new developments had on those who learned about them through preaching. At the core of this collection lies Peter of Limoges's 'Tractatus moralis de oculo', a compilation remarkable for subsuming science into the edifice of theology and glossing the physiology of the eye and theories of perception in terms of Christian ethics and moralization, making esoteric learning accessible to the public (including artists) through preaching. Transgressing traditional boundaries between art history, science, literature, and the history of religion, the nine essays in this volume complicate the generally accepted understanding of the impact science had on thirteenth-century visual culture."-- Provided by publisher.
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Contents
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Subjects
- 13th-14th centuries
- VisionReligious aspectsChristianity
- Eye in art
- Optics and art
- OpticsHistory
- Visual communicationHistoryTo 1500
- Visual perceptionHistory
- Art and scienceHistory
- Science, Medieval
- Religion and scienceHistoryTo 1500
- Visual Perception
- Religion and Science
- Communicationhistory
- Arthistory
- Sciencehistory
- History, Medieval
- Peter, of Limoges, -1306. De oculo morali.
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Location Status History of MedicineAFN.AA2-3Open shelves
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- 9780888442093
- 0888442092