INTRODUCTION. 17 



plants and animals — are the effect of these two ever- divided 

 forces, of wliich the one, heat, specially appertains to the ce- 

 lestial, and the other, cold, to the terrestrial sphere. 



With yet more unhridled fancy, but with a profound spin* 

 of inquiry, Giordano Bruno of Nola attempted to comprehend 

 the whole universe, in three Vv^orks,* entitled De la causa 

 Principio e Uno ; Contemjjlationi circa lo Injinito, U?ii' 

 verso e Mondi innumerahili ; and De JSlinimo et Maximo. 

 In the natural philosophy of Telesio, a cotemporary of Co- 

 pernicus, we recognize at all events the tendency to reduce 

 ' the changes of matter to two of its fundamental forces, which, 

 although " supposed to act from without," yet resemble the 

 fundamental forces of attraction and repulsion in the dy- 

 namic theory of nature of Boscovich and Kant. The cos- 

 mic al views of the Philosopher of Xola are purely meta- 

 physical, and do not seek the causes of sensuous phenomena 

 in matter itself, but treat of "the infinity of space, filled 

 with self - illumined worlds, of the animated condition of 

 those worlds, and of the relations of the highest intelligence 

 — God — to the universe." 



Scantily endowed with mathematical knowledge, Giorda- 

 no Bruno continued nevertheless to the period of his fearful 

 martyrdom! an enthusiastic admirer of Copernicus, Tycho 

 Brahe, and Kepler. He was cotemporary with Galileo, but 

 did not live to see the invention of the telescope by Hans 

 Lippershey and Zacharias Jansen, and did not therefore wit- 

 ness the discovery of the " lesser Jupiter world," the phases 

 of Venus, and the nebula?. With bold confidence in what 

 he terms the lume intenw, ragioiie naturale, altezza dell' 

 intelletto (force of intellect), he indulged iii happy conjec- 

 tures regarding the movement of the fixed stars, the planet 



* Compare the acute and learned commentary on the works of the 

 Philosopher of Nola, in the treatise Jordano Bruno par Christian Bar- 

 • tholmess, torn, ii., 1847, p. 129, 149, and 201. 



t He was burned at Rome on the 17th of February, IGOO. pursuant 

 to the sentence " ut quam clementissime et citra sansuinis effusionem 

 puniretur." Bruno was imprisoned six years in the Plomhi at Venice, 

 and two years in the Inquisition at Rome. When the sentence of death 

 was announced to him, Bruno, calm and unmoved, gave utterance to 

 the following noble expression: " Majori forsitan cum timore sententi- 

 am in me fertis quam ego accipiam." When a fugitive from Italy ia 

 1580, he taught at Geneva, Lyons, Toulouse, Paris, Oxford, Marburg, 

 Wittenberg (which he calls the Athens of Germany), Prague, and Helm- 

 stedt, where, in 1589, he completed the scientific instruction of Duke 

 Henry Julius of Brunswick- Wolfenbiittel. — Bartholmess, torn . ' , p. 1G7- 

 178. He also taught at Padua subsequently to 1592. 



