right|180px|thumb|Bernardino Telesio

Bernardino Telesio (; 7 November 1509 – 2 October 1588) was an Italian philosopher and natural scientist. While his natural theories were later disproven, his emphasis on observation made him the "first of the moderns" who eventually developed the scientific method.

Biography

Telesio was born of noble parentage in Cosenza, a city in Calabria, Southern Italy (Kingdom of Naples). He was educated in Milan by his uncle, Antonio, himself a scholar and a poet of eminence, and afterwards in Rome and Padua. His studies included a wide range of subjects, classics, science and philosophy, which constituted the curriculum of the Renaissance savants. Thus equipped, he began his attack upon the medieval Aristotelianism which then flourished in Padua and Bologna and he wrote some short poems, brought back to light by Luca Irwin Fragale in 2010. In 1553 he married and settled in Cosenza, becoming the founder of the Cosentian Academy. From 1544 to 1550 and after 1565 he lived in the household of Alfonso III Carafa, Duke of Nocera.

In 1552 Telesio married Diana Sersale, a widow with two children, with whom he had four children, the eldest of whom, Prospero, was mysteriously killed in 1576. After the death of his wife, Pope Pius IV offered him the Archbishopric of Cosenza, but Telesio refused in favour of his brother Tommaso. Bernardino spent the last years of his life in Cosenza where he took over the philosophical-scientific "Telesian" Academy that had been started by Aulo Giano Parrasio.

He died in Cosenza in 1588, famous among scholars and his students, but opposed by the Church for the heterodox views which he maintained against the established Aristotelianism. Pope Clement VIII placed his books on the Index of Prohibited Books in 1596.

Works

thumb|De rerum natura iuxta propria principia, 1586

His work De Rerum Natura Iuxta Propria Principia (On the Nature of Things according to their Own Principles) appeared in 1565 and the complete edition of nine books was published in 1586. These were followed by a large number of scientific and philosophical works of subsidiary importance, added to bolster his major work.

Besides De Rerum Natura, his other works include:

  • De Somno
  • De his quae in aere fiunt
  • De Mari
  • De Cometis et Circulo Lactea
  • De usu respirationis. he does acknowledge him as being "the first of the moderns" (De Telesio autem bene sentimus, atque eum ut amantem veritatis, & Scientiis utilem, & nonnullorum Placitorum emendatorem & novorum hominum primum agnoscimus., from Bacon's De principiis atque originibus) for putting observation above all other methods for acquiring knowledge about the natural world. This frequently quoted phrase from Bacon, though, is misleading, for it oversimplifies and misrepresents Bacon's opinion of Telesio. Most of Bacon's essay is an attack on Telesio and this phrase, invariably taken out of context, has facilitated a general misconception of Telesian natural philosophy by giving it a Baconian stamp of approval, which was far from Bacon's original intentions. Bacon sees in Telesio an ally in the fight against ancient authority, but he has little positive to say about Telesio's specific theories.

What is perhaps most striking about De rerum natura is Telesio's attempt to mechanize as much as possible. Telesio clearly strives to explain everything in terms of the matter informed by hot and cold and to keep his arguments as simple as possible. When his discussions turn to human beings he introduces an instinct of self-preservation to account for their motivations. And when he discusses the human mind and its ability to reason in the abstract about immaterial and divine topics, he adds a soul. For without a soul, all thought, by his reasoning, would be limited to material things. This would make God unthinkable and clearly, this was not the case, for observation proves that people think about God.

References

Further reading

  • Neil C. Van Deusen, Telesio: First of the Moderns (New York, 1932)
  • Neil Van Deusen, "The place of Telesio in the history of philosophy", Philosophical Review 44(5):417 to 434, September 1935,
  • Luca Irwin Fragale, Microstoria e Araldica di Calabria Citeriore e di Cosenza. Da fonti documentarie inedite, Milan, 2016
  • Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy entry
  • Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy entry
  • De His, Quae in Aëre Sunt, & de Terraemotibus – full digital facsimile at Linda Hall Library