ABSTRACT

This is the first volume to explore the reception of the Pythagorean doctrine of cosmic harmony within a variety of contexts, ranging chronologically from Plato to 18th-century England. This original collection of essays engages with contemporary debates concerning the relationship between music, philosophy, and science, and challenges the view that Renaissance discussions on cosmic harmony are either mere repetitions of ancient music theory or pre-figurations of the ‘Scientific Revolution’. Utilizing this interdisciplinary approach, Renaissance Conceptions of Cosmic Harmony offers a new perspective on the reception of an important classical theme in various cultural, sequential and geographical contexts, underlying the continuities and changes between Antiquity, the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. This project will be of particular interest within these emerging disciplines as they continue to explore the ideological significance of the various ways in which we appropriate the past.

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

part I|86 pages

Ancient and Medieval Sources

chapter 1|16 pages

Eight Singing Sirens

Heavenly Harmonies in Plato and the Neoplatonists 1

chapter 2|13 pages

Harmonic and Acoustic Theory

Latin and Arabic Ideas of Sympathetic Vibration as the Causes of Effects between Heaven and Earth

chapter 5|19 pages

‘Therout com so gret a noyse’

The Harmony of the Spheres and Chaucerian Poetics

part II|84 pages

The Revival of the Doctrine of the Pythagorean Harmony of the Universe in Fifteenth- and Sixteenth-Century Italy and Germany

part III|75 pages

The Tradition of the Harmony of the Spheres in Seventeenth- and Early Eighteenth-Century Europe and New Spain

chapter 11|21 pages

Cosmic Play in a Symbolic Harmonic Universe

The Reception of Cusanus and Kircher in Seventeenth-Century New Spain 1

chapter 13|17 pages

William Stukeley’s ‘Music of the Spheres’ Manuscript

Ancient Wisdom and Modern Newtonianism, c. 1720 1