Abstract
The article focuses on a special aspect of Giordano Bruno’s reception in the German
culture of the second half of nineteenth century, namely Kurd Lasswitz’s
account of Bruno’s atomistic theory of matter contained in his De minimo. In a
chapter of his Geschichte der Atomistik vom Mittelalter bis Newton, Lasswitz interprets
Bruno’s atomism as an attempt to build a theory of knowledge compatible with
the structure of the physical world. The concept of minimum, understood as both
the indivisible unity of bodies and the necessary condition of knowledge, leads
Bruno to draw conclusions that sometimes turn out to be inconsistent with his
physical theory. Although Lasswitz rejects Bruno's conflation of the mathematical
and the physical concept of body, together with his extension of the atomic structure
to the void, nevertheless, he views Bruno’s critical-gnoseological account of the
term ‘atom’ as a substantial contribution to the enhancement of modern science.