Speculum Astronomiae

Speculum Astronomiae

Albertus Magnus, produced the Speculum astronomiae ("de refutatione librorum astronomiae", incipit "Occasione quorundam librorum apud quos non est radix sciencie") sometime after 1260 to defend astrology as a Christian form of knowledge (Zambelli, 1992; Hendrix, 2007). Though Albert's authorship of this text has been debated by such scholars as Pierre Mandonnet and, more recently, Nicholas Weill-Parot, the evidence in favor of Albert's authorship is quite strong and most scholars today recognize it as a genuinely Albertine work (Mandonnet, 1910; Weill-Parot, 2002;Hendrix, 2007; Thorndike, 1923-28; Lemay, N.D.).

Albert wrote the "Speculum" in response to the debate concerning medieval astrology that peaked in 1277 at the University of Paris, with Bishop Stephen Tempier's issuance of a list of 219 propositions that were forbidden to be believed, or indeed even to be discussed (Bianchi, 1999). Bishop Tempier and those who thought like him were motivated by a concern that much of the Aristotelian knowledge being integrated into European universities represented a challenge to Christianity. For Tempier, astrology was one of the most problematic areas of knowledge, motivating him to direct a sizeable number of these condemnations at that discipline. In particular, he was concerned that any form of knowledge promising to allow one to predict the future would negate humankind's free will. After all, how can one have free will if our future actions are already predetermined and mapped out in the stars?

Albert, however, built upon an idea originally expressed by Ptolemy in the 2nd century, and summed up by the 9th century Arabic scientist Albumasar, as: "The wise man will dominate the stars," to construct an argument that astrology perfected, rather than negated free will (Zambelli, 1992; Lemay, 1962). Albert argued that celestial influence began with God before being transmitted through each of the nine upper spheres of creation, down to the tenth sphere of the sublunar realm, where we all live our lives. As this influence is passed from the stars to each one of the planets and then on to the Earth and its creatures, it picks up accretions that were not part of God's original intent (Hendrix, 2007). Therefore, terrestrial creatures did not received divine influence in its pure form, but with various changes imparted by the heavenly bodies. These accretions meant that the force of celestial influence lacked God's purity and His ability to enforce change.

Furthermore, the celestial bodies through their corporeal nature caused this flow of influence, which is perceived as visible light, to function as a bodily, rather than a spiritual, force (Hendrix, 2007). Because of this quasi-corporeal status, Albert maintained that the transmitted influence could affect the body, but not the soul. This influence would result in corporeal impulses--such as lust or gluttonous desire--that influenced the soul only indirectly, through the body. Because of this, the person receiving the influence could choose to override it through an act of will. But since most people are perfectly content to be moved along by their physical impulses, astrology would be able to accurately predict future actions in almost every case. However, a knowledge of astrology helps one to resist the influences that celestial bodies impart, therefore assisting one in resisting these bodily impulses. Thus, in Albert's argument, astrology perfects, rather than negates, free will.

The "Speculum" became central to the debate about astrology in the medieval, Renaissance, and early-modern periods, with its status as a source not declining until the early seventeenth century (Hendrix, 2007). For more than a dozen generations those who wrote upon astrology almost invariably cited the "Speculum" or used its arguments, whether to defend celestial divination, such as the 13th century physician Peter d'Abano did, or to attack it as, we see with the 15th century humanist Pico della Mirandola.

Literature

*L. Bianchi, "Cencure et Liberte intellectuelle a l' Universite de Paris (XIII-XIV siecles)". Paris: J. Vrin, 1999.
*Scott Hendrix, "God's Deaf and Dumb Instruments: Albert the Great's "Speculum astronomiae" and four centuries of readers. Knoxville: Unpublished dissertation at the University of Tennessee, 2007.
*Richard Lemay, “The Paris Prohibitions of 1210/15, the formulas of absolution by Gregory IX (1231), and the Incipit of Albertus Magnus’ Speculum Astronomiae. Origin and canonical character of the Speculum Astronomiae.” Unpublished paper, N.D.
*Richard Lemay, "Abu Ma’shar and Latin Aristotelianism." Beirut: The Catholic Press, 1962.
*Pierre Mandonnet, “Roger Bacon et le Speculum Astronomiae (1277).” "Revue neoscolastique de philosophie" 17 (1910): 313- 335.
*Lynn Thorndike, "History of Magic and Experimental Science." 8 vols. New York: Columbia University Press, 1923-28.
*Nicolas Weill-Parot, Les “images astrologiques” au moyen âge et à la renaissance: spéculations intellectuelles et pratiques magiques (XIIe-XVe siècle). Paris: Champion, 2002.
*Paola Zambelli, "The Speculum Astronomiae and its Enigma: Astrology, Theology, and Science in Albertus Magnus and his Contemporaries." Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1992.


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