
Ramism was the most innovative and disruptive educational reform movement to sweep through the international Protestant world in the latter sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries. During the 1620s, the Thirty Years' War destroyed the network of central European academies and universities which had generated most of this innovation. Students and teachers, fleeing the conflict in all directions, transplanted that tradition into many different geographical and cultural contexts in which it bore are wide variety of interrelated fruit. Within the Dutch Republic, post-Ramist method played a crucial role in the rapid assimilation of Cartesianism into a network of thriving young academies and universities. From England to east-central Europe, the tradition was no less important in accelerating the reception of Baconianism. In the easternmost outpost of the Reformed world in Transylvania, the displaced tradition generated a final flourishing of philosophical innovation which exercised a formative influence on the young Leibniz. The failure of all of these efforts to assemble the fruits of this tradition into an encyclopaedic synthesis marks a major watershed in Western intellectual history. The Reformation of Common Learning brings together all of these aspects of the tradition in a manner which roots them in deeper historical developments and relates a series of far-flung and poorly understood developments together in new ways.
This work investigates how the post-Ramist educational movement facilitated the transition from Renaissance scholasticism to the new philosophies of the seventeenth century. Howard Hotson, a specialist in early modern intellectual history, utilizes a vast array of archival records and institutional histories to argue that the displacement of scholars during the Thirty Years' War paradoxically accelerated the spread of innovative pedagogical methods. He posits that the failure to synthesize these diverse intellectual threads into a single encyclopedic system represents a critical turning point in Western thought.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars in the field of early modern intellectual history recognize this text as a rigorous and highly detailed examination of a previously fragmented area of study. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which is intended for specialists and advanced students of European history.
Page Count:
498
Publication Date:
2020-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0192636030
ISBN-13:
9780192636034
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