Giorgio Valla and the anatomo-physiology of perception nerves in Greek sources of the De expetendis et fugiendis rebus opus (Venice, 1501)

Published: 15 December 2023
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The importance of Giorgio Valla in the history of Renaissance Humanism science has not yet been adequately recognized. In the vast background of his knowledge, gathered in a remarkable encyclopedic work entitled De expetendis et fugiendis rebus (Venice 1501), the natural sciences and medicine occupy a place of particular importance and express all the extraordinary value of his double competence as a humanist and a doctor. In the section of the encyclopedia relating to ‘commoda et incommoda corporis’ (l. 48), Valla dedicates chapters 9 to 13 to the five senses, chapter 14 to imagination, chapter 15 to memory. In addition to proposing a translation of some passages of the text, our contribution intends to evaluate the sources that the author uses in the treatment of the theme of perception; how the theme in the history of ideas arrives from the ancient to the ‘encyclopedia’ of Giorgio Valla; how the author places the physiology of perception in the framework of the Christian orthodoxy that characterizes him.

 

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Cavarra B, Cilione M. Giorgio Valla and the anatomo-physiology of perception nerves in Greek sources of the De expetendis et fugiendis rebus opus (Venice, 1501). Confinia Cephalal [Internet]. 2023 Dec. 15 [cited 2024 Nov. 21];33(3):e2023011. Available from: https://www.confiniacephalalgica.com/site/article/view/15293