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Lucian Petrescu

Princeton University
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  •  Publications
    15
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 More details
  • Princeton University
    Department of Philosophy
    Visiting scholar
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Homepage
New York, NY, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
Metaphysics
Areas of Interest
Nonexistent Objects
Non-Human Animals
  • All publications (15)
  • Descartes and the internal senses: on memory and remembrance
    In Vlad Alexandrescu (ed.), Branching Off: The Early Moderns in Quest for the Unity of Knowledge, Zeta Books. pp. 116-139. 2009.
  • Descartes and the internal senses: on memory and remembrance
    In Vlad Alexandrescu (ed.), Branching Off: The Early Moderns in Quest for the Unity of Knowledge, Zeta Books. pp. 116-139. 2009.
  •  625
    Renaissance meteorology and modern science: Craig Martin: Renaissance meteorology: Pomponazzi to Descartes. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2011, viii+213 pp., $50.00 HB
    Metascience 22 (1): 155-158. 2012.
    History of PhysicsAristotle: MeteorologyMedieval and Renaissance Philosophy, Misc
  •  116
    Scholastic Logic and Cartesian Logic
    Perspectives on Science 26 (5): 533-547. 2018.
    As Roger Ariew shows, one of the most fascinating challenges for the authors trying to create a Cartesian complete course on philosophy was coming up with a Cartesian Logic based on the existing texts of the master. Were the few simple rules from the Discourse on Method the "logic" of Descartes? Were the Rules for the Direction of the Mind "logic"? How can we even have a logic without syllogism? When looking at the authors studied by Ariew one finds that the best that they could come up was addi…Read more
    As Roger Ariew shows, one of the most fascinating challenges for the authors trying to create a Cartesian complete course on philosophy was coming up with a Cartesian Logic based on the existing texts of the master. Were the few simple rules from the Discourse on Method the "logic" of Descartes? Were the Rules for the Direction of the Mind "logic"? How can we even have a logic without syllogism? When looking at the authors studied by Ariew one finds that the best that they could come up was adding some Cartesian elements on what remains basically a traditional Aristotelian Logic. It seems that there was no Cartesian Logic after all.I want to show here that Cartesian Logic is something else, not exactly...
    Science, Logic, and Mathematics
  •  1022
    The threefold object of the scientific knowledge. Pseudo-Scotus and the literature on the Meteorologica in fourteenth-century Paris
    Franciscan Studies 72 465-502. 2014.
    Aristotelian LogicWilliam of OckhamJohn Duns Scotus
  •  573
    Fides et Ratio in the Renaissance
    Society and Politics 6 (2): 124-128. 2012.
    Renaissance Humanism
  •  101
    Meteors and mixtures. Problems of hylomorphic composition
    Dissertation, Ghent University. 2014.
    Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy, MiscellaneousJohn Duns ScotusRené DescartesEarly Modern Scholas…Read more
    Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy, MiscellaneousJohn Duns ScotusRené DescartesEarly Modern Scholasticism
  •  2564
    Theories of mixture in the early modern period. JEMS 4.1 (Spring) (edited book)
    Zeta Books. 2015.
    Special issue of the Journal for Early Modern Studies (4.1., Spring 2005) Guest Editor: Lucian Petrescu.
    Leibniz: MetaphysicsEarly Modern ScholasticismMedieval and Renaissance Philosophy, MiscRené Descarte…Read more
    Leibniz: MetaphysicsEarly Modern ScholasticismMedieval and Renaissance Philosophy, MiscRené DescartesChristianity
  •  591
    Une autre histoire de la philosophie du XVIIe siècle. Journée en hommage à l’oeuvre de Geneviève Rodis-Lewis
    with Agnese Alemanno
    Nouvelles de la République des Lettres 2 87-89. 2005.
    17th/18th Century Philosophy, Misc
  •  1890
    John Duns Scotus and the Ontology of Mixture
    Res Philosophica 91 (3): 315-337. 2014.
    This paper presents Duns Scotus’s theory of mixture in the context of medieval discussions over Aristotle’s theory of mixed bodies. It revisits the accounts of mixture given by Avicenna, Averroes, and Thomas Aquinas, before presenting Scotus’s account as a reaction to Averroes. It argues that Duns Scotus rejected the Aristotelian theory of mixture altogether and that his account went contrary to the entire Latin tradition. Scotus denies that mixts arise out of the four classical elements and he …Read more
    This paper presents Duns Scotus’s theory of mixture in the context of medieval discussions over Aristotle’s theory of mixed bodies. It revisits the accounts of mixture given by Avicenna, Averroes, and Thomas Aquinas, before presenting Scotus’s account as a reaction to Averroes. It argues that Duns Scotus rejected the Aristotelian theory of mixture altogether and that his account went contrary to the entire Latin tradition. Scotus denies that mixts arise out of the four classical elements and he maintains that both the elemental forms and the elemental qualities are lost in the mixture. Consequently, he denies the distinction between the process of mixture and that of substantial change through generation and corruption. The reassessment of Scotus’s account modifies the current historical representation of this discussion, inherited from Anneliese Maier.
    John Duns ScotusAverroesAvicennaAristotle: Form and MatterThomas Aquinas
  •  847
    Cartesian Meteors and Scholastic Meteors: Descartes against the School in 1637
    Journal of the History of Ideas 76 (1): 25-45. 2015.
    This essay presents Descartes’s anti-hylomorphism in The Meteors published in 1637 and in the unpublished works that precede it, The World (Treatise on Light) and the Rules for the Direction of the Mind.
    Aristotle: MeteorologyRené DescartesEarly Modern Scholasticism
  •  1183
    Philosophia peripatetica emendata. Leibniz and Des Bosses on the Aristotelian Corporeal Substance
    Journal of the History of Philosophy 54 (3): 421-440. 2016.
    A few months before his death, Leibniz wrote to Des Bosses, My doctrine of composite substance seems to be the very doctrine of the Peripatetic school, except that their doctrine does not recognize monads. But I add them, with no detriment to the doctrine itself. You will hardly find another difference, even if you are bent on doing so.1 It is tempting to take Leibniz’s profession of Aristotelian orthodoxy as circumstantial: the entire correspondence he had with the Jesuit Father Bartholomew Des…Read more
    A few months before his death, Leibniz wrote to Des Bosses, My doctrine of composite substance seems to be the very doctrine of the Peripatetic school, except that their doctrine does not recognize monads. But I add them, with no detriment to the doctrine itself. You will hardly find another difference, even if you are bent on doing so.1 It is tempting to take Leibniz’s profession of Aristotelian orthodoxy as circumstantial: the entire correspondence he had with the Jesuit Father Bartholomew Des Bosses is based on a project of reconciliation between his “system” and the dogmas of the Catholic Church, mediated by Aristotelian philosophy.2 But even so, this circumstantial...
    Leibniz: MetaphysicsEarly Modern Scholasticism
  •  958
    Descartes on the Heartbeat: The Leuven Affair
    Perspectives on Science 21 (4): 397-428. 2013.
    There is an interesting historical detour in the dissemination of one of the seventeenth century’s most praised discoveries: the reception of Harvey’s account of the circulation of the blood is closely intertwined, especially in the Low Countries, with Descartes’ account of the origin of the heartbeat. Descartes was one of the first figures to support the circulation of the blood and to give credit to Harvey for it, although he presumably arrived at the same conclusion independently through his …Read more
    There is an interesting historical detour in the dissemination of one of the seventeenth century’s most praised discoveries: the reception of Harvey’s account of the circulation of the blood is closely intertwined, especially in the Low Countries, with Descartes’ account of the origin of the heartbeat. Descartes was one of the first figures to support the circulation of the blood and to give credit to Harvey for it, although he presumably arrived at the same conclusion independently through his own anatomical experiments. He did so while vocally rejecting Harvey’s views on the muscular nature of the heart and his explanation of cardiac motion, to promote his own mechanistic solutions instead. Although Descartes’ ..
    René Descartes
  •  1387
    Renaissance Averroism and Its Aftermath: Arabic Philosophy in Early Modern Europe
    Journal of Early Modern Studies 5 (1): 189-194. 2016.
    AverroesMedieval and Renaissance Philosophy, Misc
  •  1256
    Hylomorphism versus the Theory of Elements in Late Aristotelianism: Péter Pázmány and the Sixteenth-Century Exegesis of Meteorologica IV
    Vivarium 52 (1-2): 147-172. 2014.
    This paper investigates Péter Pázmány’s theory of mixtures from his exegesis of Meteorologica IV, in the context of sixteenth-century scholarship on Aristotle’s Meteorologica. It aims to contribute to a discussion of Anneliese Maier’s thesis concerning the incompatibility between hylomorphism and the theory of elements in the Aristotelian tradition. It presents two problems: the placement of Meteorologica IV in the Jesuit cursus on physics and the conceptualization of putrefaction as a type of s…Read more
    This paper investigates Péter Pázmány’s theory of mixtures from his exegesis of Meteorologica IV, in the context of sixteenth-century scholarship on Aristotle’s Meteorologica. It aims to contribute to a discussion of Anneliese Maier’s thesis concerning the incompatibility between hylomorphism and the theory of elements in the Aristotelian tradition. It presents two problems: the placement of Meteorologica IV in the Jesuit cursus on physics and the conceptualization of putrefaction as a type of substantial mutation. Through an analysis of these issues, it shows how sixteenth-century exegesis imposes the hylomorphic thesis onto the subject matter of meteorology and how the hylomorphic theory of substantial change can be adapted in order to accommodate the theory of elements. The case being made is that Meteorologica is a privileged place where hylomorphism and the theory of elements meet and that the late Aristotelian theory of mixtures sought to accommodate both theories of material substance.
    15th/16th Century Philosophy, MiscAverroesCommentators on Aristotle, MiscAristotle: Matter and Eleme…Read more
    15th/16th Century Philosophy, MiscAverroesCommentators on Aristotle, MiscAristotle: Matter and ElementsAvicennaJohn Duns ScotusThomas Aquinas
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