Paracelsus by Andrew Weeks: Book Cover

    Paracelsus: Speculative Theory and the Crisis of the Early Reformation by Andrew Weeks

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    (Hardcover)

    • Pub. Date: November 1996
    • 238pp
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      Product Details

      • Pub. Date: November 1996
      • Publisher: State University of New York Press
      • Format: Hardcover, 238pp

      Synopsis

      Paracelsus is regarded as one of the great medical innovators of all time, as a prototype of Goethe's Faust and as a founder of German Renaissance nature philosophy. Recently, his role in the popular "radical Reformation" that coincided with but went beyond Luther's church reform has been recognized as well. A legendary wanderer and rebel, he is an author of undisputed importance, but also one clouded by puzzling ambiguities. Based on a close examination and revised dating of Paracelsus's writings, this book rejects certain myths concerning the author's scientific orientation and experience of nature. The genesis of his thought is traced to his responses to sectarian conflicts of the early Reformation. One can characterize Paracelsus's project as that of a radical theorist who transgressed the boundaries of disciplines and seized upon the irreducible particularities of his phenomena - the transmuted disease or the unrecognized female pathology - to challenge the established order and ideology.

      Booknews

      Weeks (German, Illinois State U.) rejects some of the myths surrounding the 16th-century medical pioneer, based on a close examination and revised dating of his writings. He finds his radical trans-disciplinary theories to be a response to sectarian conflicts of the early Reformation, and such particulars as the transmuted disease and unrecognized female pathology as challenges to the established order and ideology. The quotations are offered in both German and English. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.

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