Warburg and Courtauld Institutes, 21 (1958), 119–33 (p. 120).
85. Peter E. Pormann and Emilie Savage-Smith, Medieval Islamic Medicine
(Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2007), p. 45.
86. Qusta ibn Luqa, ‘Risala fi l-farq baina r-ruh wan-nafs’, in Qusta ibn Luqa:
Texts and Studies, ed. Louise Cheikho (Frankfurt am Main, 1996), p. 165.
87. Ibn Luqa, ‘Risala’, pp. 155–6.
88. Ibn Luqa, ‘Risala’, p. 160.
89. Ibn Luqa, ‘Risala’, pp. 162–3.
90. Ibn Luqa, ‘Risala’, pp. 162, 165.
91. Ficino, Three Books on Life, p. 115.
92. Ficino, Three Books on Life, pp. 113–15.
93. Pormann and Savage-Smith, Medieval Islamic Medicine, p. 155.
94. Abraham Wasserstein (trans.), Galen’s Commentary on the Hippocratic Trea-
tise Airs, Waters, Places (Jerusalem: The Israel Academy of Science and
Humanities, 1985), p. 21; Pormann and Savage-Smith, Medieval Islamic
Medicine, p. 154.
95. Abu Ma‘shar, Al-Madkhal al-kabir, II, pp. 44–5.
96. Burnett, ‘Abu Ma’shar’, EI3.
97. Abu Ma‘shar, Al-Madkhal al-kabir, II, pp. 14–15.
98. Abu Ma‘shar, Al-Madkhal al-kabir, II, pp. 14–15.
99. Ficino, Three Books on Life, p. 117.
100. Ficino, Three Books on Life, pp. 121–2.
101. Ficino, Three Books on Life, p. 359.
102. James Hankins, ‘Ficino, Avicenna, and the Occult Powers of the Soul’, in La
magia nell’Europa moderna: Tra antica sapienza e filosofia naturale, ed. Fabrizio
Meroi and Elisabetta Scapparone (Florence: Leo S. Olschki, 2003), pp. 35–52
(37–9).
103. Ficino, Three Books on Life, p. 163.
104. Ficino, Three Books on Life, pp. 123–37.
105. Ficino, Three Books on Life, p. 149.
106. Ficino, Three Books on Life, p. 203.
230
Notes
107. Ficino, Three Books on Life, pp. 229–31.
108. Ficino, Three Books on Life, p. 239.
109. Ficino, Three Books on Life, pp. 239–41.
110. Ficino, Three Books on Life, p. 395.
111. Ficino, Three Books on Life, p. 397.
112. Ficino, Three Books on Life, p. 397.
113. Donald Beecher, ‘Ficino, Theriaca, and the Stars’, in Marsilio Ficino: His The-
ology, His Philosophy, His Legacy, ed. Michael J. B. Allen, Valery Rees and
Martin Davies (Leiden: Brill, 2002), pp. 243–56 (243).
114. Ficino, Three Books on Life, p. 305.
115. Ficino, Three Books on Life, p. 243.
116. Ficino, Three Books on Life, pp. 291, 329–40.
117. Ficino, Three Books on Life, p. 243; Copenhaver, ‘Astrology and Magic’,
p. 276.
118. Ficino, Three Books on Life, p. 243.
119. Hiro Hirai, ‘The Concept of Seeds and Nature in the Works of Marsilio
Ficino’, trans. Valery Rees, in Allen, Rees and Davies, Marsilio Ficino: His
Theology, pp. 257–84 (258, 280).
120. Ficino, Three Books on Life, p. 263.
121. Ficino, Three Books on Life, p. 243.
122. Ficino, Three Books on Life, p. 245.
123. Ficino, The Platonic Theology, I, pp. 86–7.
124. Hirai, ‘The Concept of Seeds and Nature’, pp. 266–7.
125. Ficino, Three Books on Life, p. 281.
126. Ficino, Three Books on Life, p. 258.
127. Quoted from Albertus Magnus, The Speculum astronomiae and its
Enigma: Astrology, Theology, and Science in Albertus Magnus and his Con-
temporaries, introd. Paola Zambelli, trans. C. Burnett, K. Lippincott,
D. Pingree and P. Zambelli (Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1992),
pp. 61–2.
128. Albertus Magnus, Book of Minerals, trans. Dorothy Wyckoff (Oxford:
Clarendon Press, 1976), p. 22; Adam Takahashi, ‘Nature, Formative Power
and Intellect in the Natural Philosophy of Albert the Great’, Early Science
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |