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  1. What To Do With Seventeenth-Century Natural Philosophy? A Taxonomic Problem.Christoph Lüthy - 2000 - Perspectives on Science 8 (2):164-195.
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  • Resurrection, Reassembly, and Reconstitution: Aquinas on the Soul.Eleonore Stump - 2006 - In Bruno Niederberger & Edmund Runggaldier (eds.), Die menschliche Seele: Brauchen wir den Dualismus? pp. 151-172.
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  • Mencius.Irene Bloom (ed.) - 2009 - Cambridge University Press.
    Known throughout East Asia as Mengzi, or "Master Meng," Mencius was a Chinese philosopher of the late Zhou dynasty, an instrumental figure in the spread of the Confucian tradition, and a brilliant illuminator of its ideas. Mencius was active during the Warring States Period, in which competing powers sought to control the declining Zhou empire. Like Confucius, Mencius journeyed to one feudal court after another, searching for a proper lord who could put his teachings into practice. Only a leader who (...)
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  • A New History of Christianity in China.[author unknown] - 2012
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  • Hybridizing Scholastic Psychology with Chinese Medicine: A Seventeenth-Century Chinese Catholic's Conceptions of Xin.Qiong Zhang - 2008 - Early Science and Medicine 13 (4):313-360.
    This paper explores the dynamics of cultural interactions between early modern China and Europe initiated by the Jesuits and other Catholic missionaries through a case study of Wang Honghan, a seventeenth-century Chinese Catholic who systematically sought to integrate European learning introduced by the missionaries with pre-modern Chinese medicine. Focusing on the ways in which Wang combined his Western and Chinese sources to develop and articulate his views on xin, this paper argues that Wang arrived at a peculiar hybrid between scholastic (...)
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  • Greek Rational Medicine. Philosophy and Medicine From Alcmaeon to the Alexandrians.James Longrigg & Danielle Gourevitch - 1994 - History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 16 (3):493.
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  • From Aristotle’s De Anima to Xia Dachang’s Xingshuo.Vincent Shen - 2005 - Journal of Chinese Philosophy 32 (4):575–596.
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  • Medical Topics in the De anima Commentary of Coimbra (1598) and the Jesuits’ Attitude towards Medicine in Education and Natural Philosophy.Christoph Sander - 2014 - Early Science and Medicine 19 (1):76-101.
    Early-modern Jesuit universities did not offer studies in medicine, and from 1586 onwards, the Jesuit Ratio studiorum prohibited digressions on medical topics in the Aristotelian curriculum. However, some sixteenth-century Jesuit text books used in philosophy classes provided detailed accounts on physiological issues such as sense perception and its organic location as discussed in Aristotle’s De anima II, 7–11. This seeming contradiction needs to be explained. In this paper, I focus on the interst in medical topics manifested in a commentary by (...)
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  • Digressing with Aristotle: Hieronymus Dandinus' De corpore animato (1610) and the Expansion of Late Aristotelian Philosophy.Michael Edwards - 2008 - Early Science and Medicine 13 (2):127-170.
    Early modern scholastic and Aristotelian philosophy is now a growing area of study. However, little attention has been paid to the structure and form of late Aristotelian texts, partly because they have often been seen as baroque and excessively intricate in construction. This article examines the role of structural and stylistic issues in the De anima commentary of the Jesuit author Hieronymus Dandinus, focusing particularly on the techniques he used to integrate knowledge from other disciplines and expand the familiar commentary (...)
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