%0 Book %T Physiology of the soul: mind, body and matter in the galenic tradition of late Renaissance (1550-1630) %A Bigotti, Fabrizio %S The age of Descartes 3 %D 2019 %I Brepols %C Turnhout %@ 9782503581613 %G English %F 1687031053 %O Fabrizio Bigotti %O "This book is the outcome of a long-running endeavor originating from my doctoral research on Renaissance Galenism which subsequently has been reworked, deepened, and expanded at the Warburg Institute of London, thanks to a postdoctoral fellowship by 'La Sapienza' University of Rome, and then to a Frances A. Yates fellowship granted by the Warburg Institute." (Acknowledgements) %O Dissertation University of Rome "La Sapienza" 2012 %X The book offers a new reading of the debate on mind, body and matter with regards to the largely uncharted territory of Galenic medicine in the Late Renaissance period.00In spite of the commonly held opinion according to which Galen's authority was gradually superseded by Vesalius and his followers, a close look at the influence that Galen's psychological works exerted on physicians and philosophers of the early modern period reveals quite a different picture. Not only were Galenists often keen to embrace the new anatomical discoveries, eventually they even contributed to shaping a series of new analytical, practical and experimental tools that started an in-depth transformation of the traditional rationale, with far-reaching and unexpected consequences in domains such as theory of matter, philosophical anthropology and medical experimentation. Through the lens provided by mental disease and its connection to the soul, a new concept of the body and the human animal ultimately emerges: a concept that accompanies the development of early modern ideas on subjectivity and the self %L 77.02 %9 theses %9 Text %9 Hochschulschrift