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Brendan Dooley

University College, Cork
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  •  Publications
    15
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  • University College, Cork
    Regular Faculty
Areas of Interest
Philosophy of Mind
Aesthetics
  • All publications (15)
  •  76
    Natural Knowledge at the Threshold of the Enlightenment - The Case of Antonio Vallisneri
    Journal of Early Modern Studies 12 (1): 59-81. 2023.
    Italian contributions to the Enlightenment are most often discussed in terms of the slow acceptance of Newtonian science (Ferrone) or the obstacles to change within a quaint museum of antiquated states (Venturi). This case study of an important naturalist attempts to identify the paths to change between tradition and revolt, in fields of natural knowledge that are sometimes less regarded in the context of an international movement of intellectual emancipation. In spite of an early attachment to …Read more
    Italian contributions to the Enlightenment are most often discussed in terms of the slow acceptance of Newtonian science (Ferrone) or the obstacles to change within a quaint museum of antiquated states (Venturi). This case study of an important naturalist attempts to identify the paths to change between tradition and revolt, in fields of natural knowledge that are sometimes less regarded in the context of an international movement of intellectual emancipation. In spite of an early attachment to some form of physico‑theology, Antonio Vallisneri, professor of medicine at the University of Padua from 1700 to his death in 1730, made a number of innovative contributions to biological description and natural history which placed him among the forerunners of Georges Buffon. Heir to the empirical approach enshrined in the work of Marcello Malpighi, for the most part he attempted to avoid much of the philosophical and theological speculation raging between deists and atheists. However, the implications of his work, including activity as a science communicator to wider audiences, pointed to a reassessment of the importance of accurate natural knowledge in the ongoing reform of public instruction and cultural institutions then occurring in the major cities of Italy and abroad, an important plank in the Enlightenment program in the years leading up to the French Encyclopédie.
  •  54
    The Communications Revolution in Italian Science
    History of Science 33 (4): 469-496. 1995.
  •  59
    The Crown and the Cosmos. Astrology and the Politics of Maximilian I - by Darin Hayton
    Centaurus 57 (4): 263-265. 2015.
  •  30
    A Companion to Astrology in the Renaissance (edited book)
    Brill. 2014.
    Brill’s Companion to Renaissance Astrology brings together a wide array of expertise from around the globe to explain the method and matter of this unique cultural form, summarizing the current state of research and suggesting new paths.
    15th/16th Century Philosophy, Misc
  •  68
    Veritas Filia Temporis: Experience and Belief in Early Modern Culture
    Journal of the History of Ideas 60 (3): 487-504. 1999.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Veritas Filia Temporis: Experience and Belief in Early Modern Culture *Brendan DooleyFew observers in the seventeenth century had any illusions about the reliability of political information imparted by the sources newly minted or voluminously increased during the course of the century. The newsletters appeared to be concocted from malicious gossip. 1The newspapers seemed to be published at the bidding of powerful political interests…Read more
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Veritas Filia Temporis: Experience and Belief in Early Modern Culture *Brendan DooleyFew observers in the seventeenth century had any illusions about the reliability of political information imparted by the sources newly minted or voluminously increased during the course of the century. The newsletters appeared to be concocted from malicious gossip. 1The newspapers seemed to be published at the bidding of powerful political interests with little inclination to tell the truth, 2and histories of recent events seemed to be based on faulty sources even when the writers endeavored to procure faithful accounts. “Truth is by nature elusive and slippery,” history theorist Agostino Mascardi admitted. All he could recommend as a defense for the inaccurate historian was the injunction against throwing the first stone: “Omnis homo mendax,” said David the holy king; and those who are such harsh critics of historians’ involuntary lies may well be astute trammelers of perfidy and deceit in their own lives.” 3He had no answer about historians who deliberately distorted the truth. In fact just when readers might have desired it most, from the earliest episodes of the Thirty-Years War to the last episodes of the Turkish Wars at the end of the century, the possibility of [End Page 487]gaining a realistic picture of the contemporary world seemed to be getting more and more remote.The argument of this article centers around a discussion of the cultural consequences of this late seventeenth-century trend. To some of the readers, writers, thinkers, and theorists in this period, the unreliability of information about their own time or about the past, however compounded by contemporary political and social circumstances, was nothing but a minor nuisance. To others it was a hint about the bad faith of the governments who influenced writers. To still others, this same unreliability raised deeply troubling questions about human nature and existence. It provided social and political reasons for historical skepticism, quite apart from one’s familiarity with Sextus Empiricus or the elite intellectual trends of the time. It placed everyday social and political reality in a new light, thus adding a more mundane element to the uneasy feeling produced by the new science and cosmology—the feeling, that is, of being borne along in uncontrollable currents whose exact nature the best minds nonetheless seemed incapable of understanding. It added to the disquiet produced by confessional disputes, suggesting that truth might be beyond human capacity to grasp. 4Not only in Italy but throughout Europe in the late seventeenth century this discussion will show, existing methods of ascertaining facts in political and military affairs both in the present and in past times came under a new sort of scrutiny as part of what some scholarship has regarded as no less than a wide-ranging “crisis of consciousness” at the threshold of the Enlightenment. 5The conclusion opens briefly onto the sequel of these episodes. The crisis was resolved at least in part by a corresponding movement for methodological change as well as by a reform of ideas about the proper place for intellectual improvisation in the formation of narrative in order to make historical writing persuasive as well as civically useful again. If the product of error and fraud was skepticism, the product of skepticism was modern historiography. 6 [End Page 488]History and ExperienceObviously, the elusiveness of political truth that helped touch off the late seventeenth-century crisis was no novelty of the age. Deliberate misinformation was a fully-recognized political strategy at least by the time that Machiavelli made it an explicit part of prudence by recommending the cultivation of good appearances and expressing his admiration for Pope Alexander VI and Ferdinand I of Spain as being the best liars of their time. 7In the late sixteenth century theorists all over Europe sought to join Machiavelli’s insights about the inner workings of state power to those of Tacitus in the light of conventional morality. 8In Italy it was the Piedmontese writer Giovanni Botero who, exploring these Tacitist perspectives in his Reason of State, expressed the fewest reservations about insisting on the propriety of a policy of state secrecy and misinformation. 9Florentine political theorist...
    History of Western Philosophy17th/18th Century Philosophy
  •  73
    Introduzione al pensiero di Giovanni Battista Hodierna: Filosofo matematico e astronomo dei primi GattopardiMario Pavone
    Isis 79 (4): 732-733. 1988.
  •  87
    Antonella Romano. Rome et la science moderne: Entre Renaissance et Lumières. 751 pp., illus., bibl., index. Rome: École Française de Rome, 2008. €88 (review)
    Isis 102 (1): 168-170. 2011.
    History of Science
  •  69
    Jean-Patrice Boudet;, Franck Collard;, Nicolas Weill-Parot. Médecine, astrologie et magie entre Moyen Âge et Renaissance: Autour de Pietro d'Abano. xvi + 340 pp., bibl., index. Florence: Sismel Edizioni del Galluzzo, 2013. €46
    Isis 106 (1): 172-173. 2015.
  •  112
    Letters to the Editor
    with Allison Coudert, Marjorie Grene, Rhoda Rappaport, and Peter Dear
    Isis 89 (3): 516-517. 1998.
  •  79
    Dimitrie Cantemir. L'immagine irraffigurabile della scienza sacro-santa. Foreword by, Vlad Alexandrescu. vi + 490 pp., bibl., index. Milan: Mondadori Education, 2012. €32 (review)
    Isis 104 (4): 842-843. 2013.
    17th/18th Century PhilosophyHistory of Science
  •  75
    Jeffrey R. Wigelsworth. Selling Science in the Age of Newton: Advertising and the Commoditization of Knowledge. xii + 203 pp., illus., bibl., index. Burlington, Vt.: Ashgate, 2010. $119.95 (review)
    Isis 103 (3): 598-599. 2012.
    History of Physics
  •  50
    Autopsie della Terra: Illuminismo e geologia in Alberto Fortis by Luca Ciancio (review)
    Isis 88 545-546. 1997.
    History of Science
  •  70
    From Literary Criticism to Systems Theory in Early Modern Journalism History (review)
    Journal of the History of Ideas 51 (3): 461. 1990.
    History of Western Philosophy17th/18th Century Philosophy
  •  40
    Scienza, natura, religione: Mondo newtoniano e cultura italiana nel primo settecento by Vincenzo Ferrone (review)
    Isis 76 276-277. 1985.
  •  70
    Alessandro Ottaviani;, Oreste Trabucco. Theatrum naturae: La ricerca naturalistica tra erudizione e nuova scienza nell'Italia del primo Seicento.. 177 pp., illus., app., index. Naples: La Città del Sole, 2007. €22 (review)
    Isis 101 (1): 222-223. 2010.
    History of Science
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