Proclus conceived of complex kinematic constructions in geometry as involving motions of points and lines that produced figures like conic sections within the phantasia (imagination) of the reasoner. He contended that in such constructions, the geometer projects various figures in three-dimensional space and not on a two-dimensional screen, as many commentators believe. Hence Proclus believes in what one might call the three-dimensionality of imagination. He also presents the remarkable argument that space should be understood as a kind of intelligible matter, where the latter is understood to be three-dimensional (not merely two-dimensional). Finally, the chapter discusses the extent to which Proclus foresees various early modern conceptio...
The structuring of knowledge is related in complex ways to the political, social and economic geogra...
De Prospectiva Pingendi is a Treatise whose destiny is best reflected in the title: a work dedicated...
Husserl left many unpublished drafts explaining (or trying to) his views on spatial representation a...
International audienceThe main aim of this paper is to present Proclus ’ philosophy of geometric ext...
This book brings together papers of the conference on 'Space, Geometry and the Imagination from Anti...
The changing understanding of the universe that characterized the birth of modern science included a...
International audienceWe study concepts of space and spatiality in the European late Renaissance and...
This introductory chapter spells out our vision of a more inclusive history of space. We start with ...
This volume provides a much needed, historically accurate narrative of the development of theories o...
Johannes Kepler’s Harmonices mundi libri V (1619) is capable of leaving the modern reader with an im...
This chapter considers the geometric structure of visual space and the way it has been artistically ...
As an accomplished mathematician and astronomer, Proclus was acutely aware that the increasingly com...
Most historians of science eagerly acknowledge that the early modern period witnessed a shift from a...
In this thesis, I investigate the nature of geometric knowledge and its relationship to spatial int...
Whenever we act, we act in space. Sometimes, the interactions are explicit,as we grasp the things ar...
The structuring of knowledge is related in complex ways to the political, social and economic geogra...
De Prospectiva Pingendi is a Treatise whose destiny is best reflected in the title: a work dedicated...
Husserl left many unpublished drafts explaining (or trying to) his views on spatial representation a...
International audienceThe main aim of this paper is to present Proclus ’ philosophy of geometric ext...
This book brings together papers of the conference on 'Space, Geometry and the Imagination from Anti...
The changing understanding of the universe that characterized the birth of modern science included a...
International audienceWe study concepts of space and spatiality in the European late Renaissance and...
This introductory chapter spells out our vision of a more inclusive history of space. We start with ...
This volume provides a much needed, historically accurate narrative of the development of theories o...
Johannes Kepler’s Harmonices mundi libri V (1619) is capable of leaving the modern reader with an im...
This chapter considers the geometric structure of visual space and the way it has been artistically ...
As an accomplished mathematician and astronomer, Proclus was acutely aware that the increasingly com...
Most historians of science eagerly acknowledge that the early modern period witnessed a shift from a...
In this thesis, I investigate the nature of geometric knowledge and its relationship to spatial int...
Whenever we act, we act in space. Sometimes, the interactions are explicit,as we grasp the things ar...
The structuring of knowledge is related in complex ways to the political, social and economic geogra...
De Prospectiva Pingendi is a Treatise whose destiny is best reflected in the title: a work dedicated...
Husserl left many unpublished drafts explaining (or trying to) his views on spatial representation a...