Ramus, Petrus

Ramus, Petrus
(Pierre de la Ramée, 1515-1572)
   French philosopher, humanist, teacher, and Protestant martyr, known in his own time mainly as a critic of traditional Aristotelian logic and the whole Aristotelian philosophical tradition. He also criticized the hu-manistic rhetorical tradition based on the works of Cicero and Quin-tilian and put forward a new dialectic which he viewed not only as a replacement for Aristotle but also as the foundation for a new direc-tion in education and scholarship. In his early career at the Univer-sity of Paris, his Dialecticae institutiones/Introduction to Dialectic and Aristotelicae animadversiones / Observations on Aristotle, both published in 1543, denied the value and even the authenticity of the philosophical writings attributed to Aristotle and stirred up such bit-ter conflict that after a formal disputation before a royal commission, the king forbade Ramus to teach at all.
   This prohibition was lifted under the next king, Henry II, and in 1551 Henry apointed Ramus to be one of the Royal Readers. His lec-tures in that position attacked educational tradition, and in 1562 he put forth proposals for drastic reform of the university, such as mak-ing physics a required subject in the faculty of arts, adding clinical experience to the requirements for medical degrees, and adding study of the Hebrew Old Testament and the Greek New Testament to the degree requirements in theology. His proposals recommended the fir-ing of some professors and the addition of new chairs of mathemat-ics, anatomy, botany, and pharmacy. His conversion to Calvinist reli-gion in 1561 explains some of this radicalism. Ramus' work on dialectic was influenced by the humanist Rudolf Agrícola and by the educational reforms of the Protestant schoolmaster Johann Sturm at Strasbourg.
   Although Ramus' attack on the Aristotelian tradition reflects con-cerns about prevailing philosophy that were shared by others, his own elaborate efforts to provide an alternative logic were not suc-cessful. His effort in many of his works to organize all learning in ac-cord with his conception of proper method is a significant example of use of the printed book to express relationships in visual form. Ra-mus was a teacher first of all, and his initial dissatisfaction with tra-ditional university logic was the result of his conclusion that it was unteachable. Some of his more than 50 publications were written (or at least published) in collaboration with Omer Talon (ca. 1510-1562). Ramus had great influence in the late 16th and much of the 17th century, especially in England and other Protestant coun-tries, where his reputation was enhanced by his role as one of the Protestants martyred at Paris during the infamous Massacre of St. Bartholomew's Day in 1572.

Historical Dictionary of Renaissance. . 2004.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • RAMUS Petrus — Veromanduus, Vir doctissimus. Filius agricolae, nepos carbonarii, qui ex nobilissima in Burgundionibus familia ortus, bellicis turbis solum vertere, et vitam carbonariam faciendo, sustentare se coactus est. Ingeniô ad studia factus, Parisios… …   Hofmann J. Lexicon universale

  • Ramus, Petrus — Ramus, Petrus, Humanist, s. Ramée 1) …   Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

  • Ramus, Petrus — ▪ French philosopher (Latin),French  Pierre De La Ramée   born 1515, Cuts, Picardy, Fr. died Aug. 26, 1572, Paris       French philosopher, logician, and rhetorician.       Educated at Cuts and later at the Collège de Navarre, in Paris, Ramus… …   Universalium

  • RAMUS, Petrus (Pierre de la Ramee) — (1515 1572) Petrus Ramus broke with the medieval philosophical dependence upon Ar­istotle, developing an inductive logical method that became common not only in philosophy and Protestant (Reformed) theology, but also in other disciplines. A… …   Renaissance and Reformation 1500-1620: A Biographical Dictionary

  • Petrus — comes from the Greek meaning rock , and is the common English prefix petro used to describe rock based substances, like petros oleum or rock oil. As the source of Peter, it is a common name for people from antiquity through the medieval era, and… …   Wikipedia

  • Ramus — Ramus, Petrus, eigentlich Pierre de la Ramée, Philosoph, geb. 1515 zu Cuth in Vermandois, lehrte seit 1551 Dialektik und Rhetorik an der Universität zu Paris, eifriger Gegner der aristotelisch scholastischen Philosophie, als Calvinist in der… …   Kleines Konversations-Lexikon

  • Ramus — Ramus, Petrus, latinis. Name des Pierre de la Ramée, bekannt durch seinen Kampf gegen den Scholasticismus, geb. 1515 in einem Dorfe der Picardie, lehrte Philosophie zu Paris, wurde 1551 durch Vermittlung des Cardinals von Lothringen Professor der …   Herders Conversations-Lexikon

  • Ramus — I Ramus   [lateinisch »Zweig«] der, /...mi, Anatomie: Nerven , Blutgefäß oder Bronchialast; auch die Seitenverzweigung der Vogelfeder.   II Ramus,   Petrus, eigentlich Pierre de la Ramée [ra me], französischer Humanist und …   Universal-Lexikon

  • Petrus Ramus — Petrus Ramus, or Pierre de la Ramée (1515 ndash; August 26, 1572), French humanist, logician, and educational reformer, was born at the village of Cuts in Picardy, a member of a noble but impoverished family: his father was a farmer and his… …   Wikipedia

  • Ramus — kann verschiedene Bedeutungen haben: In der Anatomie wird Ramus (lat. für „Ast“) in verschiedenen anatomischen Namen verwendet: als Bezeichnung für kleinere Arterien, Venen oder Nerven als Teil bestimmter Knochen, z. B. Unterkieferast (Ramus …   Deutsch Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”