Darrera modificació: 2020-04-21 Bases de dades: Sciència.cat
Cipriani, Mattia, "Questio satis iocunda est : Analisi delle fonti di questiones et responsiones del Liber de natura rerum di Tommaso di Cantimpré", Rursus: Poiétique, réception et réécriture des textes antiques, 11 [=Nature et morale: sources, et postérité homilétique, des encyclopédies du XIIIe siècle, ed. Isabelle Draelants] (2017), publ. electrònica.
- Resum
- Even though encyclopedists of the thirteenth century used a common corpus of sources, each had a precise and personal way to choose, ‘tailorize' and arrange the contents taken from these auctoritates. The peculiar and custom modi scribendi permitted the compiler (who collects authoritative materials from others) to become an author (who in turn becomes authoritative), while also reflecting accurately the different forme mentis and purposes behind the encyclopedic texts. Through the analysis of the exclusive way in which the Flemish Dominican friar Thomas of Cantimpré (1201-1270/1271) copies dialogical treatises – such as Adelard of Bath' Questiones naturales and the anonymous questiones salernitane – in both authorial versions of his encyclopedia, Liber the natura rerum (approximately 1242/1247-1255/1260), this essay shows how Thomas uses these particular sources to reach his own pragmatic and dominican goals.
- Matèries
- Història natural
Manuscrits Enciclopedisme
- Notes
- La pensée médiévale est latérale : pour éclairer le monde de la création divine, elle s'étend en tous sens dans un système de correspondances infini de similitudes entre le ciel et la terre. ὄψις γὰρ τῶν ἀδήλων τὰ φαινόμενα, Invisibilia per visibilia: saint Paul relaye Anaxagore, Augustin renvoie à saint Paul pour encourager chaque auteur à connaître davantage « la nature et les propriétés des choses » pour éclairer le texte biblique.
- URL
- https://journals.openedition.org/rursus/1330
|