Knowledge, Discovery and Imagination in Early Modern Europe

Recent explanations of changes in early modern European thought speak much of a move from orality and emphasis on language to print culture and a ‘spatial’ way of thinking. Timothy J. Reiss offers a more complex explanation for the massive changes that occurred. He describes how by the late fifteenth century the language arts of the trivium had come to seem useful only for communication, teaching and public debate, and how humanists turned to the mathematical arts of the quadrivium - including music - to enable new means and methods of discovery. Reiss goes on to argue that the new ‘mathematical’ ideal formed the basis of wide sociocultural renewal; he analyses Northern vernacular grammars, examines the work of French and Italian mathematicians, musicians and philosophers including Descartes, and censures such modern commonplaces as the supposed impact of print and ‘spatial’ thinking. He ends by exploring the broad impact of this ‘mathematization’ of the Western imagination.

• Major new insights on the making of modern European thought, covering a range of disciplines • Important new book by leading academic (5 previous books published)

Contents

Introduction; Part I. Problematizing the Language Arts: 1. Grammarians’ dreams; 2. Grammarians’ nightmares; Part II. Passages: 3. Rhetoric and politics; 4. Method and knowledge; Part III. Mathematics, Music, and Rational Aesthetics: 5. Quadrivial pursuits; 6. Bridging effects; 7. Musical elaborations; 8. Well-tempered imagining; Bibliography; Index.