BEGIN:VCALENDAR
PRODID:-//Grails iCalendar plugin//NONSGML Grails iCalendar plugin//EN
VERSION:2.0
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
METHOD:PUBLISH
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260605T121509Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20220411T170000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20220411T190000
SUMMARY:Descartes as a Physician: A Forgotten Chapter in the History of Cartesianism?
UID:20260608T091140Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Rome
LOCATION:Venice\, Italy
DESCRIPTION:<p>Venue: online Zoom meeting</p>\n<p>Zoom link: https://unive.zoom.us/j/84571640858?pwd=MWFJbFgxRjlnaVJLWUpIOWJwQlZVUT09</p>\n<p>Zoom meeting ID: 845 7164 0858\; Passcode: gMi180</p>\n<p>Abstract:</p>\n<p>That Descartes considered medicine as the main means of preserving health\, i.e. the condition of all other goods in this life\, and that consequently he granted health a central place in his research programme was beyond doubt both for him and for his contemporaries. The renewal and fruitfulness of international studies on this point attests that we have no doubts about it today either. However\, it has not always been so. In 1865\, in a twenty-page text entitled &ldquo\;Descartes m&eacute\;decin\,&rdquo\; the spiritualist Albert Lemoine (1824&ndash\;1874) reacted to the publication of the &OElig\;uvres in&eacute\;dites (1859) of Descartes by the Leibnitian diplomat Louis Alexandre Foucher de Careil (1859&ndash\;1860). These two books brought to the attention of the public Descartes&rsquo\;s physiological fragments not present in his &OElig\;uvres compl&egrave\;tes (1826)\, published in eleven volumes by Victor Cousin (1824&ndash\;1826)\, and in the abridged edition of his &OElig\;uvres philosophiques (1835) in four volumes by Adolphe Garnier (1835&ndash\;1835). Though\, according to Lemoine\, this was not enough to explain the specific &ldquo\;insult&rdquo\; perpetrated to an essential part of Descartes&rsquo\;s endeavour\, namely medicine\, as well as the almost exclusive position that Descartes the &ldquo\;metaphysician&rdquo\; and &ldquo\;psychologist&rdquo\;&nbsp\; of the cogito came to take in the formation of young minds. According to him\, &ldquo\;We have known for a long time that Descartes was not only concerned with geometry and physics as well as with philosophy\, but also with anatomy and physiology. [&hellip\;] The &OElig\;uvres in&eacute\;dites of Descartes reminds us about this. [&hellip\;] [His] L&rsquo\;homme\, La formation du f&oelig\;tus\, and Passions did not allow us to ignore that Descartes cultivated the study of the human body and knew its structure as a man of his time. But it is not in these treatises that we will look for Descartes\, and we have some reason [for this]&rdquo\; (L&rsquo\;&acirc\;me et le corps. Etudes de philosophie morale et naturelle\, Paris\, Didier\, 1856\, 299). On the ground of the analysis of these historiographical materials\, in this paper I will provide a reflection on the nature\, the reasons and the eminently philosophical issues underlying this curious collective academic &ldquo\;amnesia.&rdquo\;</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Andrea Strazzoni;CN=Marco Sgarbi:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
