Man as Image of Nature in Magnus Hundt: The Perspective of a Thomist ca. 1500
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Magnus Hundt’s Anthropologium and His Image of Man
3. The Emphasis on the Human Body
4. A Thomist’s Project?
5. Example: The Eye
6. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | |
2 | There is a certain terminological difficulty with the word ‘nature’ or its Latin equivalent ‘natura’ in the Middle Ages. In the texts of Hundt and his contemporaries, ‘natura’ is used to refer to the essence of a thing. Thus, ‘Homo est animal rationale’ was used to define the nature of man. In this context, the nature of man includes both his physical component, which he has in common with other living beings, and his intellectual component. Today, however, when we speak of the ‘natural side’ of man, we tend to mean his physical side. In this paper, the meaning oscillates somewhat between these two senses. However, I have tried to indicate as clearly as possible what is meant in each case. |
3 | |
4 | The original title of Hundt 1501 reads: ‘Antropologium de hominis dignitate, natura, et proprietatibus, de elementis, partibus, et membris humani corporis, de iuvamentis nocumentis, accidentibus, vitiis, remediis, et physionomia ipsorum, de excrementis et exeuntibus, de spiritu humano eiusque natura, proprietatibus, et operibus, de anima humana et ipsius appendiciis’. |
5 | Reproduction from the Universitätsbibliothek Basel, Le VI 27. |
6 | Hundt 1501, fol. A IVv: ‘Tametsi hominum natura multipliciter serva est […] ex parte corporis […] et ex parte animae […] ipsa tamen post deum […] cuncta excellit sua dignitate creata, quoniam non solum ad dei imaginem factus est homo, propter quem deus factus est homo, ut ipse rursus deus fieret.’ |
7 | Hundt 1501, fol. B IIv: ‘Et haec est anima rationalis, quae cum corpore humano hominem constituit. Sic itaque solus homo est dei et universi totius nexus, caelestium et terrestrum uniculum et nodus […]’ |
8 | Hundt 1501, fol. B IIIv: ‘In hoc autem a deo differt, qui omnia facit in esse naturali, homo autem in esse artificiali, quod naturam imitatur’. Cf. Aristotle, Physics, 194a21–22. |
9 | These formulas are essentially printed marginalia of the ‘Anthropologium’. They are also mirrored at the beginning of the chapter, Hundt 1501, fol. A IVv in the following formulation: ‘[Homo existit, K.E.] omnia ens, omnia continens, omnia cognoscens, potens et arte perficiens, ad quem omnia ordinantur, in quo omnia communicant, propter quem omnia facta sunt.’ For this, cf. also Haedke (1961, p. 37). |
10 | Hundt 1501, fol. B IIv: ‘[A]nima est omnia secundum species, quas in se habet, nam omnia sensibilia secundum sensum et intelligibilia secundum intellectum.’ Cf. Aristotle, De anima, 431b21. Hundt 1501, fol. B IIv therefore also speaks at this point of man being the measure of all things: ‘Homo est mensura omnium’. |
11 | Hundt 1501, fol. B IIIr: ‘Cognoscit […] homo omnia sensibilia per sensum et spiritualia sive intelligibilia per intellectum abstrahendo species rerum, quae sunt in anima.’ |
12 | Hundt 1501, fol. B IIIv: ‘Et manus est organum organorum, qua homo potest omnia materialia facere.’ Cf. Albertus Magnus (1916–20), lib. 21, tract. 1, cap. 1, vol. 2, p. 1324 and Aristotle, De anima, 432a1f. |
13 | Hundt 1501, fol. B IIIv: ‘Natura autem da[t] homini membra, quibus potest omnia facere.’ |
14 | Hundt 1501, fol. B IIv: ‘Ex hinc infertur, quod homo continet omnia, quia […] omnes creaturae mundi quodammodo inveniuntur in eo […] inanimata secundum esse, vegetabilia ratione vegetationis, animalia quo ad sensum, spiritus et seperata quo ad intellectum.’ Cf. also Thomas de Aquino (1889), prima pars, q. 91, art. 1; p. 390f. which Hundt cites for this. On fol. B IIIr it then reads: ‘Ex his liquet hominem omnia continere tanquam ex omnibus constitutum.’ The formulation that in man all things come together is similar in meaning to ‘in homo omnia communicat’ (Hundt 1501, fol. B IVr). In this context, however, it is primarily a matter of the arrangement of the elements and humours in the creatures. |
15 | Hundt 1501, fol. A VIv: ‘[Homo] mundus minor dicitur’. Cf. Hamesse (1974, p. 156, no. 206); Aristotle, Physics, 252b26f. |
16 | Hundt 1501, fol. B IIIv: ‘Ad hominem praeterea omnia tendunt et ordinata sunt caelum et tota natura.’ |
17 | Hundt 1501, fol. B IIIv: ‘Tribus enim ordinibus universum ordinatur secundum Albertum in de homine in fine, scilicet in deum, in se et ad hominem. […] Ad hominem autem, quia est finis omnium creaturarum, cui omnia subministrant, qui de omnibus participat, unde ad ipsum omnia ordinantur et tendunt.’ Cf. Albertus Magnus (2008), p. 595, ll. 4–35; cf. also Hundt 1501, fol. B IIv. |
18 | Hundt 1501, fol. B IIIv-B IVr: ‘Perfectiora enim sunt fines aliorum.’ Cf. Aristotle, De partibus animalium, 645a25–36. |
19 | Hundt 1501, fol. B IIIv: ‘Sicut enim deus est finis optimi hominis, ita optimus homo est finis aliorum.’ Cf. Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics, 1094a22–24, 1102a1–4, 1101b12–18; Aristotle, Physics, 194a29–33. |
20 | Hundt 1501, fol. A IVv: ‘Hominum natura serva est […] ex parte corporis, quod multis et variis subiectum est necessitatibus et indigentiis ob legis praevaricationem.’ For a contextualisation of the original sin and its implications, see (Hoenen 2023). |
21 | Reproduction from the Universitätsbibliothek Basel, Le VI 27. |
22 | Hundt 1501, fol. B Vv: ‘Homo est nobilissimum animatum […] quoad figuram, quia habet erectissimum figuram tendentem ad caelum.’ Cf. Albertus Magnus (1916–20), lib. I tract. 2 cap. 26., vol. 1, p. 179. |
23 | Hundt 1501, fol. A VIv: ‘Hominis enim caput, in quo sunt virtutes intellectuales et animales, positum est supra totum corpus regimine et situ secundum creationem et situm mundi totius.’ |
24 | Hundt 1501, fol. A VIv: ‘[Homo] mundus minor dicitur’. Cf. Hamesse (1974, p. 156, no. 206); Aristotle, Physics, 252b26f. |
25 | Hundt 1501, fol. B Ir: ‘Et quia homo superius sui corpori, quod est caput, versus superius mundi habet, et inferius versus mundi inferius, ideoque optime est dispositus secundum dispositionem totius mundi.’ |
26 | Hundt 1501, fol. B IIIv: ‘Et manus est organum organorum, quia homo potest omnia materialia facere, […] Homo autem, quia inter omnia animalia intelligentiam habet et cognitionem in omnibus modis, fuit ei datum instrumentum, in quo conveniunt omnia instrumenta, dabantur igitur illi manus loco omnium, cum ita utatur eis loco modorum armorum. Et ideo lenis corpore et nudus nascitur, quia omnia sibi facere potest […] Est praeterea manus signum, quod homo omnibus dominatur animatis, ut declarat Albertus in De animalibus.’ Hundt refers here, among others, to Galen, De juvamentis membrorum. Cf. Albertus Magnus (1916–20), lib. XIV tract. 2 cap. 2., vol. 2, p. 965f. |
27 | Hundt 1501, fol. I IVv: ‘Manus signum intellectus et organum existens organorum, in quo omnia conveniunt instrumenta, [est, K.E.] a deo datum hominibus.’ |
28 | Hundt 1501, fol. A VIv-B Ir: ‘Solum igitur corpus humanum ad mundi ordinationem situatur erigendo caput sursum versus caelum, […] quia locutio impediretur, quae est homini propria, si caput inclinatum haberet aut manuum usus ad diversa opera cessaret.’ |
29 | Hundt 1501, fol. B Vv: ‘[H]omo est nobilissimum animatum […] ratione quantitatis, quia diametri tres omne constituunt corpus perfectum, primo caeli, quare naturalius et perfectius erit corpus quod diametrorum naturalium mensuram participat. Diameter autem longitudinis mensurat a sursum in deorsum, et in solo homine idem est sursum, quod est sursum mundi, et idem deorsum, quod est deorsum mundi. Similiter est de latitudinis diametro, quia solus inter omnia animalia latum habet corpus secundum mensuram suae quantitatis latitudine proportionata, quamvis quidam vermes lati sint non tamen latitudinem habent longitudini proportionatam. Longitudo enim in corpore naturali semper debet vincere latitudinem, si non sit vitium naturae. Quadrupedia autem habent spissiora corpora quam lata. Homo etiam solus diametrum profunditatis minorem habet ceteris diametris.’ Santing (2020, p. 6), adds that there is a longer so-called ‘physico-philosophical’ tradition, in which philosophical and medical considerations are very closely connected. The hope was that some moral, economic or political insights about human beings could be gained from the study of physical characteristics. |
30 | Hundt 1501, fol. A VIv: ‘Solum igitur corpus humanum ad mundi ordinationem situatur […] gratia mixtionis perfectae.’ Cf. also foll. B Ir and B IVr. Hundt 1501, fol. B IVv: ‘Mixtum praeterea humanum corpus existit temperatissimum, quia deus donavit homini complexionem temperationem, quam in hoc mundo foret possibile invenire cum suarum virtutum, quibus agit aequidistantia’. In 1490, Hundt had published a pseudo-Thomastic text on the composition of the elements under the title ‘De mixtione elementorum’ (Hundt 1490). |
31 | Thomas de Aquino (1918), lib. 2, cap. 90, p. 549: ‘Complexio autem maxime aequalis est complexio corporis humani. Oportet igitur, si substantia intellectualis uniatur alicui corpori mixto, quod illud sit eiusdem naturae cum corpore humano. Forma etiam eius esset eiusdem naturae cum anima humana, si esset substantia intellectualis. Non igitur esset differentia secundum speciem inter illud animal et hominem.’ Cf. Fitzpatrick (2017, chp. 3, fn. 89). |
32 | The soul as ruler in the body is discussed in Hundt 1501, fol. A VIv: ‘Praeterea: sicut se habet in nave nauta, in curro auriga, in choreis choraula, in civitate lex, in agmine dux, ita deus in mundo et anima in corpore humano’. The ‘informatio’ is mentioned in Hundt 1501, fol. B IVr: ‘consubstantiatio totius corporis cum anima, quae dici potest informatio’. |
33 | Thomas de Aquino (1889), prima pars, q. 91, art. 3, c.; p. 393: ‘Finis autem proximus humani corporis est anima rationalis et operationes ipsius: materia enim est propter formam, et instrumenta propter actiones agentis. Dico ergo quod Deus instituit corpus humanum in optima dispositione secundum convenientiam ad talem formam et ad tales operationes. Et si aliquis defectus in dispositione humani corporis esse videtur, considerandum est quod talis defectus sequitur ex necessitate materiae, ad ea quae requiruntur in corpore ut sit debita proportio ipsius ad animam et ad animae operationes.’ |
34 | For the distinction between the schools in the 15th century, and especially between Albertism and Thomism, see (Hoenen 1993a, 1993b, 1996, 1997). |
35 | For another Thomistic reference, see Lambertus de Monte (1498, fol. 60rb). |
36 | Hundt 1501, fol. A IVv: ‘[N]atura hominum […] serva est […] ex parte animae, quae nuda sine specibus, habitibus et virtutibus creatur.’ |
37 | Hundt 1501. fol. A IVv: ‘[T]amen post deum, qui est prima omnium causa, [homo, K.E.] cuncta excellit sua dignitate creata, quoniam non solum ad dei imaginem factus est homo, propter quem deus factus est homo, ut ipse rursus deus fieret.’ |
38 | Hundt 1501, fol. H IVr: ‘Oculus est organum videndi complexione aqueum cum quadam anteriori planitie rotundum in supremo anterioris partis capitis situatum, ex septem tunicis et tribus humoribus constitutum, sex musculis motum, et uno aut duobus seu tribus fultum.’ |
39 | With regard to the aqueous composition of the eye, Hundt refers, for example, to the Aristotelian text De sensu et sensato. Cf. Hamesse, p. 196, no. 9; Thomas de Aquino (1985), tr. 1, cap. 2, p. 22f.; Aristotle, De sensu et sensato, 438a12–14. |
40 | Reproduction from the Universitätsbibliothek Basel, Le VI 27. |
41 | Hundt 1501, fol. H IVv: ‘Sursum locatur sicut custodes civitatis. Unde Avicenna et Galenus volunt caput esse creatum et elevatum propter oculos; cuius oppositum dictum est et patet ex differentia XL.’ |
42 | Hundt 1501, fol. H IVv: ‘Oculi partes sunt duplices: Essentiales vere ipsum constituents, quarum sunt decem, scilicet tres humores et septem particuli. Et coadiuvantes sive circumiacentes, quae sunt duplices, scilicet intrinsice et forinsice. Coadiuvantes intrinsice sunt nervi optici, vene, arterie, musculi, caro alba et piguedo. Extrinsice vero sunt supercilia, cilia et palpebre, orbita et lachrimalia.’ |
43 | Hundt 1501, fol. H IVv: ‘Quarta [sc. tunica, K.E.], quae dicitur aranea, oritur a prima posteriori, quae est ultimi puriditatis et luciditatia, quia colores et forme imprimuntur in ipsam. Unde ista tela est proprium visus instrumentum vel per se vel per adiutorium cristallini humoris.’ |
44 | Hundt 1501, fol. H Vr: ‘Quantitas oculi diversificatur, nam quidam sund magni, quidam parvi, quidam mediocres. Numerus est binarius sicut in aliis organis sensuum.’ |
45 | Hundt 1501, fol. H Vr: ‘Situavit natura eos in homine propinquos ut perfectius perveniret ex eis videndi actus, propter eandem causam nervi optici cruciantur.’ |
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Engel, K. Man as Image of Nature in Magnus Hundt: The Perspective of a Thomist ca. 1500. Histories 2023, 3, 32-45. https://doi.org/10.3390/histories3010004
Engel K. Man as Image of Nature in Magnus Hundt: The Perspective of a Thomist ca. 1500. Histories. 2023; 3(1):32-45. https://doi.org/10.3390/histories3010004
Chicago/Turabian StyleEngel, Karsten. 2023. "Man as Image of Nature in Magnus Hundt: The Perspective of a Thomist ca. 1500" Histories 3, no. 1: 32-45. https://doi.org/10.3390/histories3010004
APA StyleEngel, K. (2023). Man as Image of Nature in Magnus Hundt: The Perspective of a Thomist ca. 1500. Histories, 3(1), 32-45. https://doi.org/10.3390/histories3010004