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Humanism in an Age of Science

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In 1632, the Amsterdam regents founded an Athenaeum or 'Illustrious School'. This kind of institution provided academic teaching, although it could not grant degrees and had no compulsory four-facu...
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  • 31 July 2009
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In 1632, the Amsterdam regents founded an Athenaeum or 'Illustrious School'. This kind of institution provided academic teaching, although it could not grant degrees and had no compulsory four-faculty system. Athenaeums proliferated in the first century after the Dutch Revolt, but few of them survived long. They have been interpreted as the manifestation of an evolving vision of the role of a higher education; this book, by contrast, argues that education at the Amsterdam Athenaeum was staunchly traditional both in methods and in substance. While religious, philosophical and scientific disputes rocked contemporary Dutch learned society, this analysis of letters, orations and disputations reveals that a traditional and Aristotelian humanism thrived at the Athenaeum until well into the seventeenth century.
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Price: $185.00
Pages: 434
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: Brill's Studies in Intellectual History
Publication Date: 31 July 2009
ISBN: 9789004176850
Format: Hardcover
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"Through careful analysis of this corpus of texts embracing a broad range of disciplines, Van Miert exhibits not only mastery of the Neo-Latin language of academic teaching with its disciplinary varieties, but above all 'that' he is able to reconstruct the intellectual background and the doctrinal scope of teaching at the Amsterdam Atheneaeum during the seventeenth century."
Willem Frijhoff, History of Universities Volume XXV, No. 2 (2011) pp. 173-179.

''Clear, graceful and thorough, this is a distinguished and rewarding contribution to the history of higher education.''
Joseph M. McCarthy (Suffolk University) in Seventeenth-Century News, 2010:68, 3-4.
Dirk van Miert, Ph.D. (2004) in Latin, University of Amsterdam, is a postdoctoral fellow at the Warburg Institute, London. He has published on many aspects of early modern intellectual history and is co-editor of the correspondence of Joseph Scaliger.