Auteur: Harich-Schwarzbauer, Henriette
Titre: Cicero – Vadians helfende Hand im reformierten‘ Mela-Kommentar (Basel 1522)
Revue/Collection: In : Scheidegger Laemmle, Cédric (ed.), Cicero in Basel, Locating Classical Reception in a Humanist City, De Gruyter, 2024, 374 p.
Lieu èdition: Berlin, Boston
Éditeur: De Gruyter
Annèe edition: 2024
Pages: 223-236
Mots-clès: Commentaires - Commenti - Commentaries, Héritage - Fortuna - Legacy, Philosophie - Filosofia - Philosophy
Description: Henriette Harich-Schwarzbauer, shifts attention from Cicero the rhetorician and stylist to Cicero the philosopher, as she explores the presence of Cicero’s writings in the commentary which Joachim von Watt (dit Vadianus) of St. Gall wrote on Pomponius Mela’s Chorographia. While the first edition of Vadianus’ commentary (Vienna 1518) does not assign a prominent space to Cicero, the expanded second edition which Cratander printed at Basel four years later (1522) offers meticulous and nuanced engagement with Cicero. As Harich-Schwarzbauer argues, Vadianus invokes Cicero’s affinity with Academic scepticism in order to discuss fundamental questions of epistemology and scientific progress; at the same time, Vadianus finds in Cicero a model that helps him navigate the debates in which he saw himself embroiled after the first edition of his commentary [Scheidegger Laemmle 2024,15].
Liens: https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783111454641-012/pdf
Sigle auteur: Harich-Schwarzbauer 2024
Titre: Cicero – Vadians helfende Hand im reformierten‘ Mela-Kommentar (Basel 1522)
Revue/Collection: In : Scheidegger Laemmle, Cédric (ed.), Cicero in Basel, Locating Classical Reception in a Humanist City, De Gruyter, 2024, 374 p.
Lieu èdition: Berlin, Boston
Éditeur: De Gruyter
Annèe edition: 2024
Pages: 223-236
Mots-clès: Commentaires - Commenti - Commentaries, Héritage - Fortuna - Legacy, Philosophie - Filosofia - Philosophy
Description: Henriette Harich-Schwarzbauer, shifts attention from Cicero the rhetorician and stylist to Cicero the philosopher, as she explores the presence of Cicero’s writings in the commentary which Joachim von Watt (dit Vadianus) of St. Gall wrote on Pomponius Mela’s Chorographia. While the first edition of Vadianus’ commentary (Vienna 1518) does not assign a prominent space to Cicero, the expanded second edition which Cratander printed at Basel four years later (1522) offers meticulous and nuanced engagement with Cicero. As Harich-Schwarzbauer argues, Vadianus invokes Cicero’s affinity with Academic scepticism in order to discuss fundamental questions of epistemology and scientific progress; at the same time, Vadianus finds in Cicero a model that helps him navigate the debates in which he saw himself embroiled after the first edition of his commentary [Scheidegger Laemmle 2024,15].
Liens: https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783111454641-012/pdf
Sigle auteur: Harich-Schwarzbauer 2024