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Ramon Llull

Ramon Llull[a] TOSF (Catalan: [rəˈmoɲ ˈʎuʎ]; c. 1232[4] – 1315/1316) was a philosopher, theologian, poet, missionary, and Christian apologist from the Kingdom of Majorca.


Ramon Llull

Anachronistic portrait of Ramon Llull by Francisco Ribalta (1620)
Doctor Illuminatus
Bornc. 1232
City of Mallorca (now Palma),
Kingdom of Majorca, now Spain
Died1315/1316
Venerated inRoman Catholic Church
Beatified1847 by Pope Pius IX
Feast30 June
Ramon Llull
Anachronistic image of Ramon Llull with speech scroll, by an unknown artist (16th-17th century)
Notable work
EraMedieval philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolLullism
Main interests
Christian theology, philosophy, Logic, Mathematics.
Notable ideas

He invented a philosophical system known as the Art, conceived as a type of universal logic to prove the truth of Christian doctrine to interlocutors of all faiths and nationalities. The Art consists of a set of general principles and combinatorial operations. It is illustrated with diagrams.

A prolific writer, he is also known for his literary works written in Catalan, which he composed to make his Art accessible to a wider audience. In addition to Catalan and Latin he also probably wrote in Arabic (although no texts in Arabic survive). His books were translated into Occitan, French, and Castilian during his lifetime.[5]

Although his work did not enjoy huge success during his lifetime, he has had a rich and continuing reception. In the early modern period his name became associated with alchemical works.[6] More recently he has been recognized as a precursor of the modern liberal voting franchise 450 years before Borda and Condorcet had proposed the idea and also the computer and a pioneer of computation theory.[2][7][8]

Life

Early life and family

 
Scenes from the life of Raymond Lull, in a 14th-century manuscript

Llull was born in Palma into a wealthy family of Barcelona patricians who had come to the Kingdom of Majorca in 1229 with the conquering armies of James I of Aragon. James I had conquered the formerly Almohad-ruled Majorca as part of a larger move to integrate the territories of the Balearic Islands (now part of Spain) into the Crown of Aragon. Llull was born there a few years later, in 1232 or 1233. Muslims still constituted a large part of the population of Majorca and Jews were present in cultural and economic affairs.[9]

In 1257 Llull married Blanca Picany [ca], with whom he had two children, Domingo and Magdalena.[10][11] Although he formed a family, he lived what he would later call the licentious and worldly life of a troubadour.

Religious calling

In 1263 Llull experienced a series of visions. He narrates the event in his autobiography Vita coaetanea ("A Contemporary Life"):

Ramon, while still a young man and Seneschal to the King of Majorca, was very given to composing worthless songs and poems and to doing other licentious things. One night he was sitting beside his bed, about to compose and write in his vulgar tongue a song to a lady whom he loved with a foolish love; and as he began to write this song, he looked to his right and saw our Lord Jesus Christ on the Cross, as if suspended in mid-air.[12]

The vision came to Llull five times in all and inspired in him three intentions: to give up his soul for the sake of God’s love and honor, to convert the Saracens (i.e., Arabs and/or Muslims) to Christianity, and write the best book in the world against the errors of the unbelievers.[13]

Following his visions he sold his possessions on the model of Saint Francis of Assisi and set out on pilgrimages to the shrines of Saint Mary of Rocamadour, Saint James, and other places, never to come back to his family and profession. When he returned to Majorca he purchased a Muslim slave in order to learn Arabic from him.[14] For the next nine years, until 1274, he engaged in study and contemplation in relative solitude. He read extensively in both Latin and Arabic, learning both Christian and Muslim theological and philosophical thought.[15]

Between 1271 and 1274 Llull wrote his first works, a compendium of the Muslim thinker Al-Ghazali's logic and the Llibre de contemplació en Déu (Book on the Contemplation of God), a lengthy guide to finding truth through contemplation.

In 1274, while staying at a hermitage on Puig de Randa, the form of the great book Llull was to write was finally given to him through divine revelation: a complex system that he named his Art, which would become the motivation behind most of his life's efforts.

Missionary work and education

Llull urged the study of Arabic and other then-insufficiently studied languages in Europe,[16] along with most of his works, to convert Muslims and schismatic Christians.[17] He travelled through Europe to meet with popes, kings, and princes, trying to establish special colleges to prepare future missionaries.[18] In 1276 a language school for Franciscan missionaries was founded at Miramar, funded by the King of Majorca.[19]

About 1291 he went to Tunis, preached to the Saracens, disputed with them in philosophy, and after another brief sojourn in Paris, returned to the East as a missionary.[20] Llull travelled to Tunis a second time in about 1304, and wrote numerous letters to the king of Tunis, but little else is known about this part of his life.[21][22]

He returned in 1308, reporting that the conversion of Muslims should be achieved through prayer, not through military force. He finally achieved his goal of linguistic education at major universities in 1311 when the Council of Vienne ordered the creation of chairs of Hebrew, Arabic and Chaldean (Aramaic) at the universities of Bologna, Oxford, Paris, and Salamanca as well as at the Papal Court.[21]

Llull called for the expulsion of Jews who were unwilling to convert to Christianity, and influenced later European monarchs to expel Jews in practice.[23]

Death

 
Llull's tomb in Palma

In 1314, at the age of 82, Llull traveled again to Tunis, possibly prompted by the correspondence between King James II of Aragon and al-Lihyani, the Hafsid caliph, indicating that the caliph wished to convert to Christianity. Whereas Llull had been met with difficulties during his previous visits to North Africa, he was allowed to operate this time without interference from the authorities due to the improved relations between Tunis and Aragon.[24]

His last work is dated December 1315 in Tunis. The circumstances of his death remain unknown. He probably died sometime between then and March 1316, either in Tunis, on the ship on the return voyage, or in Majorca upon his return.[25] Llull's tomb, created in 1448, is in the Franciscan church in Palma, Majorca.[26]

Works

Llull’s Art

Llull’s Art (in Latin Ars) is at the center of his thought and undergirds his entire corpus. It is a system of universal logic based on a set of general principles activated in a combinatorial process. It can be used to prove statements about God and Creation (e.g., God is a Trinity). Often the Art formulates these statements as questions and answers (e.g., Q: Is there a Trinity in God? A: Yes.). It works cumulatively through an iterative process; statements about God's nature must be proved for each of His essential attributes in order to prove the statement true for God (i.e., Goodness is threefold, Greatness is threefold, Eternity is threefold, Power is threefold, etc.).

What sets Llull's system apart is its unusual use of letters and diagrams, giving it an algebraic or algorithmic character. He developed the Art over the course of many decades, writing new books to explain each new version. The Art's trajectory can be divided into two main phases, although each phase contains numerous variations. The first is sometimes called the Quaternary Phase (1274 - 1290) and the second the Ternary Phase (1290 - 1308). This terminology was coined by Anthony Bonner.[27]

Quaternary Phase

The two main works of the Quaternary Phase are the Ars compendiosa inveniendi veritatem (ca. 1274) and the Ars demonstrativa (ca. 1283).[28] The Ars demonstrativa has twelve main figures. A set of sixteen principles, or 'dignities' (divine attributes) comprise the general foundation for the system's operation. These are contained in the first figure (Figure A) and assigned letters (B through R). The rest of the figures enable the user to take these principles and elaborate to demonstrate the truth of statements. Figure T is important because it contains "relational principles"(i.e. minority, majority, equality), also assigned letters. The Art then lists combinations of letters as a sort of visual aid for the process of working through every possible combination of principles. Figure S displays the Augustinian powers of the soul (will, intellect, and memory) and their acts (willing, understanding, remembering). Figure S was eliminated from the Art after 1290. Even in subsequent versions of the Art Llull maintained that the powers of the soul needed to be in alignment for a proper operation of the Art. This differentiates Llull's system from Aristotelian logic. Because classical logic did not take the powers of the soul into account it was ill-equipped to handle theological issues, in Llull's view.

Ternary Phase

Llull inaugurated the Ternary Phase with two works written in 1290: the Ars inventiva veritatis and the Art amativa.[27] The culmination of this phase came in 1308 with a finalized version of the Art called the Ars generalis ultima. In the same year Llull wrote an abbreviated version called the Ars brevis. In these works Llull revised the Art to have only four main figures. He reduced the number of divine principles in the first figure to nine (goodness, greatness, eternity, power, wisdom, will, virtue, truth, glory). Figure T also now has nine relational principles (difference, concordance, contrariety, beginning, middle, end, majority, equality, minority), reduced from fifteen. Llull kept the combinatorial aspect of the process.

Correlatives

Llull introduced an aspect of the system called the "correlatives" just before the final transition to the Ternary Phase. The correlatives first appear in a work called the Lectura super figuras Artis demonstrativae (c.1285-7) and came to undergird his formulation of the nature of being.[29] The doctrine of correlatives stipulates that everything, at the level of being, has a threefold structure: agent, patient, act. For example, the divine principle "goodness" consists of "that which does good" (agent), "that which receives good" (patient), and "to do good" (act). Llull developed a system of Latin suffixes to express the correlatives, i.e. bonitas (goodness); bonificans, bonificatus, bonificare. This became the basis for proving that the divine principles are distinct yet equivalent in God (each principle has the same underlying threefold structure, yet retains its own unique correlatives). This supports the combinatorial operation of the Art (i.e., this means that in God goodness is greatness and greatness is goodness, goodness is eternity and eternity is goodness, etc.), the Lullian proof of the Trinity (each divine principle has the three correlatives and together the principles comprise the Godhead, therefore the Godhead is threefold) and the Incarnation (the active and passive correlatives are equivalent to matter and form, and the trinitarian unfolding of being occurs on all levels of reality).[30]

Other works

Influence of Islam and early works

It has been pointed out that the Art's combinatorial mechanics bear a resemblance to zairja, a device used by medieval Arab astrologers.[31][32] The Art's reliance on divine attributes also has a certain similarity to the contemplation of the ninety-nine Names of God in the Muslim tradition.[33] Llull's familiarity with the Islamic intellectual tradition is evidenced by the fact that his first work (1271-2) was a compendium of Al-Ghazali's logic.[34]

Dialogues

From early in his career Llull composed dialogues to enact the procedure of the Art.[35] This is linked to the missionary aspect of the Art. Llull conceived it as an instrument to convert all peoples of the world to Christianity and experimented with more popular genres to make it easier to understand. His earliest and most well known dialogue is the Book of the Gentile and the Three Wise Men, written in Catalan the 1270s and later translated into Latin. It is framed as a meeting of three wise men (a Muslim, a Jew, and a Christian) and a Gentile in the woods. They learn about the Lullian method when they encounter a set of trees with leaves inscribed with Lullian principles. Lady Intelligence appears and informs them of the properties of the trees and the rules for implementing the leaves. The wise men use the trees to prove their respective Articles of Faith to the Gentile (although some of the Islamic tenets cannot be proved with the Lullian procedure) and in the end the Gentile is converted to Christianity. Llull also composed many other dialogues. Later in his career when he became concerned with heretical activity in the Arts Faculty of the University of Paris, he wrote "disputations" with philosophers as interlocutors.[36][37] He also created a character for himself and he stars in many of these dialogues as the Christian wise man (for instance: Liber de quaestione valde alta et profunda, composed in 1311).

Tree diagrams

Llull structured many of his works around trees. In some, like the Book of the Gentile and the Three Wise Men, the "leaves" of the trees stand for the combinatorial elements (principles) of the Art. In other works a series of trees shows how the Art generates all ("encyclopedic") knowledge. The Tree of Science (1295-6) comprises sixteen trees ranging from earthly and moral to divine and pedagogical.[38] Each tree is divided into seven parts (roots, trunk, branches, twigs, leaves, flowers, fruits). The roots always consist of the Lullian divine principles and from there the tree grows into the differentiated aspects of its respective category of reality.[39]

Novels

 
Ceramic ceiling light in the Sanctuary of Cura, Puig de Randa.

Llull also wrote narrative prose drawing on the literary traditions of his time (epic, romance) to express the Art. These works were intended to communicate the potentially complex operations of the Art to a lay audience. Blanquerna (c.1276-83) is his most well known novel. Felix (1287-9) is also notable, although it was not widely circulated during his lifetime and was only available in Catalan. It is formulated as a sort of Bildungsroman in which Felix, the main character, begins on a journey at the instigation of his father who has written the "Book of Wonders". The book is divided into ten chapters (echoing the encyclopedic range of the Tree of Science) as Felix gains knowledge: God, angels, heavens, elements, plans, minerals, animals, man, Paradise, and Hell. It turns out to be a metafiction, as Felix's journey ends at a monastery where he relates the "Book of Wonders" now embellished and fused with the account of his own adventures.[40]

Reception

Medieval

Academic theology

According to Llull's autobiographical Vita, his Art was not received well at the University of Paris when he first presented it there in the 1280s. This experience supposedly is what led him to revise the Art (creating the tertiary version). Llull's Art was never adopted by mainstream academia of the thirteenth and early-fourteenth centuries, but it did accrue quite a bit of interest. A significant number of Lullian manuscripts were collected by the Carthusian monks of Paris at Vauvert and by several theologians who donated their manuscripts to the Sorbonne Library. One disciple, Thomas Le Myésier, went so far as to create elaborate compilations of Llull's works, including a manuscript dedicated to the queen of France.[41]

 
Ramon Llull, with his disciple Thomas Le Myésier, presenting three anthologies to the queen

Opposition

In the 1360s the inquisitor Nicholas Eymerich condemned Lullism in Aragon. He obtained a papal bull in 1376 to prohibit Lullian teaching, although it proved ineffective. In Paris Jean Gerson also issued a series of polemical writings against Lullism. There was an official document issued to prohibit the Lullian Art from being taught in the Faculty of Theology.[42]

Early modern

Academic theology

Llull's most significant early modern proponent was Nicholas of Cusa. He collected many works by Llull and adapted many aspects of Lullian thought for his own mystical theology.[43] There was also growing interest in Lullism in Catalonia, Italy, and France. Jacques Lefèvre d'Étaples published eight of Llull's books in 1499, 1505, and 1516. Lefèvre was therefore responsible for the first significant circulation of Llull's work in print outside of Catalonia.[44] It is thought that the influence of Lullian works in Renaissance Italy (coinciding with the rise of neoplatonism) contributed to a development in metaphysics, from a static Artistotelian notion of being to reality as a dynamic process.[45] In Northern and Central Europe Lullism was adopted by Lutherans and Calvinists interested in promoting programs of theological humanism. Gottfried Leibniz was exposed to these currents during his years in Mainz, and Llull's Art clearly informed his De Arte Combinatoria.[46]

Pseudo-Llull and alchemy

There is a significant body of alchemical treatises falsely attributed to Llull. The two fundamental works of the corpus are the Testamentum and the Liber de secretis naturae seu de quinta essentia which both date to the fourteenth century.[47] Occultists such as Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa and Giordano Bruno were inspired by these works.[48] Despite Llull's growing identification with alchemy and Neoplatonic mysticism, others (such as Giulio Pace and Johann Heinrich Alsted) were still interested in the Lullian Art as a universal logic, even in the seventeenth century when Descartes and Ramus proposed competing systems.[49]

Iberian Revival and beatification

Meanwhile, in Spain, the Cardinal Francisco Jiménez de Cisneros, Archbishop of Toledo, had taken up Lullism for his project of reform. Cisneros mobilized various intellectuals and editors, founding chairs at universities and publishing Llull's works.[50] Founded in 1633, the Pontifical College of La Sapiencia on Majorca became the epicenter for teaching Lullism. The Franciscans from La Sapiencia were the ones to seek Llull's canonization at Rome in the seventeenth century. These efforts were renewed in the eighteenth century, but never succeeded.[51] Llull was beatified in 1847 by Pope Pius IX. His feast day was assigned to 30 June and is celebrated by the Third Order of St. Francis.[52]

Twentieth and twenty-first centuries

Scholarship

Llull is now recognized by scholars as significant in both the history of Catalan literature as well as intellectual history. From 1906 to 1950 the Comissió Editora Lul·liana led a project to edit Llull's works written in Catalan. This series was called the Obres de Ramon Llull (ORL). In 1957 the Raimundus-Lullus-Institut was founded in Freiburg, Germany to begin the work of editing Llull's Latin works. This series is called the Raimundi Lulli Opera Latina (ROL) and is still ongoing.[53] In 1990 the work on the Catalan texts was restarted with the Nova Edició de les Obres de Ramon Llull (NEORL).[54] In the world of English-language scholarship the work of Frances Yates on memory systems (The Art of Memory, published 1966) brought new interest to Ramon Llull as a figure in the history of cognitive systems.

Art and fiction

Llull has appeared in the art and literature of the last century, especially in the genres of surrealism, philosophical fantasy, and metafiction. Salvador Dalí's alchemical thought was influenced by Ramon Llull and Dalí incorporated the diagrams from the Lullian Art into his work called Alchimie des Philosophes.[55] In 1937 Jorge Luis Borges wrote a snippet called "Ramon Llull' s Thinking Machine" proposing the Lullian Art as a device to produce poetry.[56] Other notable references to Ramon Llull are: Aldous Huxley's short story "The Death of Lully", a fictionalized account aftermath of Llull's stoning in Tunis, set aboard the Genoese ship that returned him to Mallorca.[57] Paul Auster refers to Llull (as Raymond Lull) in his memoir The Invention of Solitude in the second part, The Book of Memory. Llull is also a major character in The Box of Delights, a children's novel by poet John Masefield.

Other recognition

Llull's Art is sometimes recognized as a precursor to computer science and computation theory.[58] With the discovery in 2001 of his lost manuscripts, Ars notandi, Ars eleccionis, and Alia ars eleccionis, Llull is also given credit for creating an electoral system now known as the Borda count and Condorcet criterion, which Jean-Charles de Borda and Nicolas de Condorcet independently proposed centuries later.[59]

Translations

  • Ramon Llull's New Rhetoric, text and translation of Llull's 'Rethorica Nova', edited and translated by Mark D. Johnston, Davis, California: Hermagoras Press, 1994
  • Selected Works of Ramon Llull (1232‑1316), edited and translated by Anthony Bonner, Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press 1985, two volumes XXXI + 1330 pp. (Contents: vol. 1: The Book of the Gentile and the Three Wise Men, pp. 93–305; Ars Demonstrativa, pp. 317–567; Ars Brevis, pp. 579–646; vol. 2: Felix: or the Book of Wonders, pp. 659–1107; Principles of Medicine pp. 1119–1215; Flowers of Love and Flowers of Intelligence, pp. 1223–1256)
  • Doctor Illuminatus: A Ramon Llull Reader, edited and translated by Anthony Bonner, with a new translation of The Book of the Lover and the Beloved by Eve Bonner, Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press 1994

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ Anglicised as Raymond Lully, Raymond Lull; Latinized as Raimundus, or Raymundus Lullus, or Raimundo Lulio, or Lullius

Citations

  1. ^ Frances Yates, "Lull and Bruno" (1982), in Collected Essays: Lull & Bruno, vol. I, London: Routledge & Kegan Paul.
  2. ^ a b The History of Philosophy, Vol. IV: Modern Philosophy: From Descartes to Leibniz by Frederick C. Copleston (1958).
  3. ^ Anthony Bonner (ed.), Doctor illuminatus: A Ramon Llull Reader, Princeton University Press, 1993, p. 82.
  4. ^ Born 1232 per Mark D. Johnston in Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy. London: Routledge, 1998. Older sources (such as versions of Encyclopædia Britannica at least up to 1955) give 1235; the current Britannica gives 1232/33.
  5. ^ Badia, Lola; Santanach, Joan; Soler, Albert (2016). Ramon Llull as a Vernacular Writer: Communicating a New Kind of Knowledge. Woodbridge: Tamesis.
  6. ^ Pereira, Michela (1989). The Alchemical Corpus attributed to Raymond Lull. London: The Warburg Institute.
  7. ^ Bonner 2007, p. 290.
  8. ^ Donald Knuth (2006), The Art of Computer Programming: Generating all trees, vol. 4–4, Addison-Wesley Professional, p. 56, ISBN 978-0-321-33570-8
  9. ^ Bonner 2007, p. 1.
  10. ^ . Any Llull (Generalitat de Catalunya – Institut Ramon Llull – Govern de les Illes Balears) (in Catalan). Year 1257. Archived from the original on 2016-04-10. Retrieved 2023-04-25.
  11. ^ "Biografia Ramon Llull". Associació d'Escriptors en Llengua Catalana (in Catalan). Retrieved 2023-04-25.
  12. ^ Bonner, "Historical Background and Life" (an annotated Vita coaetanea) at 10–11, in Bonner (ed.), Doctor Illuminatus (1985).
  13. ^ Llull, Ramon (2010). A Contemporary Life, Edited and translated by Anthony Bonner. Barcelona/Woodbridge: Tamesis. pp. 33–35. ISBN 9781855661998.
  14. ^ Llull, Ramon (2010). A Contemporary Life, Edited and translated by Anthony Bonner. Barcelona/Woodbridge: Tamesis. pp. 37–39. ISBN 9781855661998.
  15. ^ Churchill, Leigh (2004). The Age of Knights & Friars, Popes & Reformers. Milton Keynes: Authentic Media. ISBN 1-84227-279-9, 9781842272794. p. 190
  16. ^ Mark David Johnston (1996). The Evangelical Rhetoric of Ramon Llull: Lay Learning and Piety in the Christian West Around 1300. Oxford University Press. pp. 9–. ISBN 978-0-19-509005-5.
  17. ^ Blum, Paul Richard (28 June 2013). Philosophy of Religion in the Renaissance. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. pp. 1–. ISBN 978-1-4094-8071-6.
  18. ^ Paul Richard Blum: Philosophy of Religion in the Renaissance. Ashgate 2010, 1-14
  19. ^ . Archived from the original on 2013-03-13. Retrieved 2011-12-29.
  20. ^ Turner, William. "Raymond Lully." The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol. 12. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1911. 31 January 2019
  21. ^ a b Albrecht Classen (5 March 2018). Toleration and Tolerance in Medieval European Literature. Taylor & Francis. pp. 280–. ISBN 978-1-351-00106-9.
  22. ^ Bonner, "Historical Background and Life" (the Vita coaetanea augmented and annotated) at 10-11, 34-37, in Bonner (ed.), Doctor Illuminatus (1985).
  23. ^ This Day In Jewish History | 1306: King Philip 'The Fair' Expels All France's Jews
  24. ^ Lower, Michael (2009). "Ibn al-Lihyani: sultan of Tunis and would-be Christian convert (1311–18)". Mediterranean Historical Review. 24 (1): 17–27. doi:10.1080/09518960903000744. S2CID 161432419.
  25. ^ Llull, Ramon (2010). A Contemporary Life, Edited and translated by Anthony Bonner. Barcelona/Woodbridge: Tamesis. pp. 10–11. ISBN 9781855661998.
  26. ^ "Basilica Sant Francesc", Illes Balears
  27. ^ a b Bonner 2007, p. 121.
  28. ^ Bonner 2007, p. 26.
  29. ^ Gayà, Jordi (1979). “La teoría luliana de los correlativos. Historia de su formación conceptual.” Universität Freiburg im Breisgau.
  30. ^ Pring-Mill, R.D.F. (1955). "The Trinitarian World Picture of Ramon Lull". Romanistisches Jahrbuch. 7: 229–256.
  31. ^ Lohr, Charles (1984). "Christianus arabicus, cuius nomen Raimundus Lullus". Freiburger Zeitschrift für Philosophie und Theologie. 31: 64–65.
  32. ^ Lohr, 1984, 63.
  33. ^ Lohr, Charles (1967). Raimundus Lullus' Compendium Logicae Algazelis. Quellen, Lehre und Stellung in der Geschichte der Logik. Thesis, Freiburg im Breisgau. pp. 93–130.
  34. ^ Friedlein, Roger (2004). Der Dialog bei Ramon Llull: Literarische Gestaltung als apologetische Strategie. Tübingen: M. Niemeyer. ISBN 3484523182.
  35. ^ van Steenberghen, Fernand (1960). "La signification de l'oeuvre anti-averroiste de Raymond Lull". Estudios Lulianos. 4: 113–28.
  36. ^ Imbach, Ruedi (1987). “Lulle face aux Averroïstes parisiens,” in Raymond Lulle et le pays d’Oc. Toulouse: Privat, pp. 261–82.
  37. ^ English translation by Yanis Dambergs: https://lullianarts.narpan.net/TreeOfScience/TreeOfScience-1.pdf and https://lullianarts.narpan.net/TreeOfScience/TreeOfScience2.pdf
  38. ^ Anthony Bonner, "The structure of the Arbor scientiae". Arbor Scientiae: der Baum des Wissens von Ramon Lull. Akten des Internationalen Kongresses aus Anlass des 40-jährigen Jubiläums des Raimundus-Lullus-Instituts der Universität Freiburg i. Br., ed. Fernando Domínguez Reboiras, Pere Villalba Varneda and Peter Walter, "Instrumenta Patristica et Mediaevalia. Subsidia Lulliana" 1 (Turnhout: Brepols, 2002), pp. 21-34.
  39. ^ Dominguez, Fernando. "Felix Summary". Ramon Llull Database. Retrieved 14 August 2021.
  40. ^ Hillgarth, J.N. (1971). Ramon Lull and Lullism in Fourteenth-century France. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  41. ^ Hillgarth, 1971, 269.
  42. ^ Colomer, Eusebio (1961). Nikolaus von Kues und Raimund Llull. Berlin: De Gruyter.
  43. ^ Hillgarth, 1971, 284
  44. ^ Lohr, Charles (1988). “Metaphysics.” In The Cambridge History of Renaissance Philosophy, edited by C. B. Schmitt, Quentin Skinner, Eckhard Kessler, and Jill Kraye, 537–638. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  45. ^ Ramis Barceló, Rafael (2019). "Academic Lullism from the Fourteenth to the Eighteenth Century," in A Companion to Ramon Llull and Lullism. Leiden: Brill, p. 458.
  46. ^ Pereira, Michela (1990). "Lullian Alchemy: Aspects and Problems of the corpus of Alchemical Works Attributed to Ramon Llull." Catalan Review, Vol. IV, 1-2: 41-54.
  47. ^ Yates, Frances (1964). Giordano Bruno and the Hermetic Tradition. Chicago: Chicago University Press, pp. 308-309.
  48. ^ Hillgarth 1971, 297.
  49. ^ Rubí, L. B. (2018). " Lullism among French and Spanish Humanists of the Early 16th Century". In A Companion to Ramon Llull and Lullism. Leiden: Brill.
  50. ^ Ramis Barceló, R. (2018). "Chapter 12 Academic Lullism from the Fourteenth to the Eighteenth Century". In A Companion to Ramon Llull and Lullism. Leiden: Brill.
  51. ^ Habig, Marion. (Ed.). (1959). The Franciscan Book of Saints. Franciscan Herald Press.
  52. ^ "RAIMVNDI LVLLI Opera latina". Retrieved 11 September 2021.
  53. ^ "Nova Edició de les Obres de Ramon Llull (NEORL)". Retrieved 11 September 2021.
  54. ^ "SALVADOR DALÍ: ALCHIMIE DES PHILOSOPHES". Retrieved 11 September 2021.
  55. ^ "Ramon Llull's Thinking Machine" in Borges, Jorge Luis (1999). Selected Non-fictions. New York: Viking. pp. 155–159.
  56. ^ Huxley, Aldous (1920). Limbo. Chatto & Windus.
  57. ^ Sales, Ton (2011). “Llull as Computer Scientist, or Why Llull Was One of Us.” In Ramon Llull. From the Ars Magna to Artificial Intelligence, edited by Alexander Fido and Carles Sierra. Barcelona: Artificial Intelligence Research Institute, 25–38.
  58. ^ G. Hägele & F. Pukelsheim (2001). . Studia Lulliana. 41: 3–38. Archived from the original on 2006-02-07.

Sources

  • Lola Badia, Joan Santanach and Albert Soler, Ramon Llull as a Vernacular Writer, London: Tamesis, 2016.
  • Anthony Bonner (ed.), Doctor Illuminatus. A Ramon Llull Reader (Princeton University 1985), includes The Book of the Gentile and the Three Wise Men, The Book of the Lover and the Beloved, The Book of the Beasts, and Ars brevis; as well as Bonner's "Historical Background and Life" at 1–44, "Llull's Thought" at 45–56, "Llull's Influence: The History of Lullism" at 57–71.
  • Bonner, Anthony (2007). The Art and Logic of Ramon Llull: A User's Guide. Leiden: Brill.
  • Umberto Eco (2016). "The Ars Magna by Ramon Llull". Contributions to Science. 12 (1): 47–50. doi:10.2436/20.7010.01.243. ISSN 2013-410X.
  • Alexander Fidora and Josep E. Rubio, Raimundus Lullus, An Introduction to His Life, Works and Thought, Turnhout: Brepols, 2008.
  • Mary Franklin-Brown, Reading the World: Encyclopedic Writing in the Scholastic Age, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2012.
  • J. N. Hillgarth, Ramon Lull and Lullism in Fourteenth-Century France, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1971.
  • Mark D. Johnston, The Spiritual Logic of Ramón Llull, Oxford: Clarenden Press, 1987.
  • Charles H. Lohr, “Ramon Lull’s Theory of Scientific Demonstration,” in Argumentationstheorie, ed. Klaus Jacobi. Leiden: Brill, 1993, 729–46.
  • Michela Pereira, The Alchemical Corpus attributed to Raymond Lull, London: The Warburg Institute, 1989.
  • R. D. F. Pring-Mill, “The Trinitarian World Picture of Ramon Lull,” Romanistisches Jahrbuch 7 (1955): 229–256.
  • Frances Yates, The Art of Memory, London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1966.
  • Frances Yates, "Lull and Bruno" (1982), in Collected Essays: Lull & Bruno, vol. I, London: Routledge & Kegan Paul.

External links

ramon, llull, other, uses, disambiguation, llull, redirects, here, spanish, basketball, player, sergio, llull, medieval, spanish, businesswoman, caterina, llull, sabastida, tosf, catalan, rəˈmoɲ, ˈʎuʎ, 1232, 1315, 1316, philosopher, theologian, poet, missionar. For other uses see Ramon Llull disambiguation Llull redirects here For the Spanish basketball player see Sergio Llull For the medieval Spanish businesswoman see Caterina Llull i Sabastida Ramon Llull a TOSF Catalan reˈmoɲ ˈʎuʎ c 1232 4 1315 1316 was a philosopher theologian poet missionary and Christian apologist from the Kingdom of Majorca BlessedRamon LlullTOSFAnachronistic portrait of Ramon Llull by Francisco Ribalta 1620 Doctor IlluminatusBornc 1232City of Mallorca now Palma Kingdom of Majorca now SpainDied1315 1316Venerated inRoman Catholic ChurchBeatified1847 by Pope Pius IXFeast30 JuneRamon LlullAnachronistic image of Ramon Llull with speech scroll by an unknown artist 16th 17th century Notable workBlanquerna Tree of Science Ars MagnaEraMedieval philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolLullismMain interestsChristian theology philosophy Logic Mathematics Notable ideasLullist thought Election theory Computation theoryInfluences Aristotle Augustine Denys Eriugena Constantine the African Francis of Assisi Bonaventure Aquinas Joachim of Fiore Arnaldus de Villa Nova Matthaeus Platearius Peter of Spain Ibn al Muqaffa al Farabi al Ghazali Avicenna Ibn Sab in al ShushtariInfluenced Giordano Bruno 1 Nicholas of Cusa Giovanni Pico della Mirandola Rene Descartes Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz 2 Peter of Limoges 3 Heymeric de Campo Raymond of Sabunde Bernardo Buil George Ripley Jacques Lefevre d Etaples Charles de Bovelles Bernard de Lavinheta Francisco Jimenez de Cisneros Johann Reuchlin Johannes Trithemius Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa Paracelsus John Dee Giulio Pace Jan Amos Comenius Juan de Zumarraga Francis Bacon John Wilkins George Dalgarno Athanasius Kircher Johann Heinrich Alsted Johann Heinrich Bisterfeld George Herbert John Donne Thomas Traherne Robert Boyle Francisco de Osuna Junipero Serra Josep PerarnauHe invented a philosophical system known as the Art conceived as a type of universal logic to prove the truth of Christian doctrine to interlocutors of all faiths and nationalities The Art consists of a set of general principles and combinatorial operations It is illustrated with diagrams A prolific writer he is also known for his literary works written in Catalan which he composed to make his Art accessible to a wider audience In addition to Catalan and Latin he also probably wrote in Arabic although no texts in Arabic survive His books were translated into Occitan French and Castilian during his lifetime 5 Although his work did not enjoy huge success during his lifetime he has had a rich and continuing reception In the early modern period his name became associated with alchemical works 6 More recently he has been recognized as a precursor of the modern liberal voting franchise 450 years before Borda and Condorcet had proposed the idea and also the computer and a pioneer of computation theory 2 7 8 Contents 1 Life 1 1 Early life and family 1 2 Religious calling 1 3 Missionary work and education 1 4 Death 2 Works 2 1 Llull s Art 2 1 1 Quaternary Phase 2 1 2 Ternary Phase 2 1 3 Correlatives 2 2 Other works 2 2 1 Influence of Islam and early works 2 2 2 Dialogues 2 2 3 Tree diagrams 2 2 4 Novels 3 Reception 3 1 Medieval 3 1 1 Academic theology 3 1 2 Opposition 3 2 Early modern 3 2 1 Academic theology 3 2 2 Pseudo Llull and alchemy 3 2 3 Iberian Revival and beatification 3 3 Twentieth and twenty first centuries 3 3 1 Scholarship 3 3 2 Art and fiction 3 3 3 Other recognition 4 Translations 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Notes 6 2 Citations 6 3 Sources 7 External linksLife EditEarly life and family Edit Scenes from the life of Raymond Lull in a 14th century manuscript Llull was born in Palma into a wealthy family of Barcelona patricians who had come to the Kingdom of Majorca in 1229 with the conquering armies of James I of Aragon James I had conquered the formerly Almohad ruled Majorca as part of a larger move to integrate the territories of the Balearic Islands now part of Spain into the Crown of Aragon Llull was born there a few years later in 1232 or 1233 Muslims still constituted a large part of the population of Majorca and Jews were present in cultural and economic affairs 9 In 1257 Llull married Blanca Picany ca with whom he had two children Domingo and Magdalena 10 11 Although he formed a family he lived what he would later call the licentious and worldly life of a troubadour Religious calling Edit In 1263 Llull experienced a series of visions He narrates the event in his autobiography Vita coaetanea A Contemporary Life Ramon while still a young man and Seneschal to the King of Majorca was very given to composing worthless songs and poems and to doing other licentious things One night he was sitting beside his bed about to compose and write in his vulgar tongue a song to a lady whom he loved with a foolish love and as he began to write this song he looked to his right and saw our Lord Jesus Christ on the Cross as if suspended in mid air 12 The vision came to Llull five times in all and inspired in him three intentions to give up his soul for the sake of God s love and honor to convert the Saracens i e Arabs and or Muslims to Christianity and write the best book in the world against the errors of the unbelievers 13 Following his visions he sold his possessions on the model of Saint Francis of Assisi and set out on pilgrimages to the shrines of Saint Mary of Rocamadour Saint James and other places never to come back to his family and profession When he returned to Majorca he purchased a Muslim slave in order to learn Arabic from him 14 For the next nine years until 1274 he engaged in study and contemplation in relative solitude He read extensively in both Latin and Arabic learning both Christian and Muslim theological and philosophical thought 15 Between 1271 and 1274 Llull wrote his first works a compendium of the Muslim thinker Al Ghazali s logic and the Llibre de contemplacio en Deu Book on the Contemplation of God a lengthy guide to finding truth through contemplation In 1274 while staying at a hermitage on Puig de Randa the form of the great book Llull was to write was finally given to him through divine revelation a complex system that he named his Art which would become the motivation behind most of his life s efforts Missionary work and education Edit Llull urged the study of Arabic and other then insufficiently studied languages in Europe 16 along with most of his works to convert Muslims and schismatic Christians 17 He travelled through Europe to meet with popes kings and princes trying to establish special colleges to prepare future missionaries 18 In 1276 a language school for Franciscan missionaries was founded at Miramar funded by the King of Majorca 19 About 1291 he went to Tunis preached to the Saracens disputed with them in philosophy and after another brief sojourn in Paris returned to the East as a missionary 20 Llull travelled to Tunis a second time in about 1304 and wrote numerous letters to the king of Tunis but little else is known about this part of his life 21 22 He returned in 1308 reporting that the conversion of Muslims should be achieved through prayer not through military force He finally achieved his goal of linguistic education at major universities in 1311 when the Council of Vienne ordered the creation of chairs of Hebrew Arabic and Chaldean Aramaic at the universities of Bologna Oxford Paris and Salamanca as well as at the Papal Court 21 Llull called for the expulsion of Jews who were unwilling to convert to Christianity and influenced later European monarchs to expel Jews in practice 23 Death Edit Llull s tomb in Palma In 1314 at the age of 82 Llull traveled again to Tunis possibly prompted by the correspondence between King James II of Aragon and al Lihyani the Hafsid caliph indicating that the caliph wished to convert to Christianity Whereas Llull had been met with difficulties during his previous visits to North Africa he was allowed to operate this time without interference from the authorities due to the improved relations between Tunis and Aragon 24 His last work is dated December 1315 in Tunis The circumstances of his death remain unknown He probably died sometime between then and March 1316 either in Tunis on the ship on the return voyage or in Majorca upon his return 25 Llull s tomb created in 1448 is in the Franciscan church in Palma Majorca 26 Works EditLlull s Art Edit Llull s Art in Latin Ars is at the center of his thought and undergirds his entire corpus It is a system of universal logic based on a set of general principles activated in a combinatorial process It can be used to prove statements about God and Creation e g God is a Trinity Often the Art formulates these statements as questions and answers e g Q Is there a Trinity in God A Yes It works cumulatively through an iterative process statements about God s nature must be proved for each of His essential attributes in order to prove the statement true for God i e Goodness is threefold Greatness is threefold Eternity is threefold Power is threefold etc What sets Llull s system apart is its unusual use of letters and diagrams giving it an algebraic or algorithmic character He developed the Art over the course of many decades writing new books to explain each new version The Art s trajectory can be divided into two main phases although each phase contains numerous variations The first is sometimes called the Quaternary Phase 1274 1290 and the second the Ternary Phase 1290 1308 This terminology was coined by Anthony Bonner 27 Quaternary Phase Edit The two main works of the Quaternary Phase are the Ars compendiosa inveniendi veritatem ca 1274 and the Ars demonstrativa ca 1283 28 The Ars demonstrativa has twelve main figures A set of sixteen principles or dignities divine attributes comprise the general foundation for the system s operation These are contained in the first figure Figure A and assigned letters B through R The rest of the figures enable the user to take these principles and elaborate to demonstrate the truth of statements Figure T is important because it contains relational principles i e minority majority equality also assigned letters The Art then lists combinations of letters as a sort of visual aid for the process of working through every possible combination of principles Figure S displays the Augustinian powers of the soul will intellect and memory and their acts willing understanding remembering Figure S was eliminated from the Art after 1290 Even in subsequent versions of the Art Llull maintained that the powers of the soul needed to be in alignment for a proper operation of the Art This differentiates Llull s system from Aristotelian logic Because classical logic did not take the powers of the soul into account it was ill equipped to handle theological issues in Llull s view Ternary Phase Edit Llull inaugurated the Ternary Phase with two works written in 1290 the Ars inventiva veritatis and the Art amativa 27 The culmination of this phase came in 1308 with a finalized version of the Art called the Ars generalis ultima In the same year Llull wrote an abbreviated version called the Ars brevis In these works Llull revised the Art to have only four main figures He reduced the number of divine principles in the first figure to nine goodness greatness eternity power wisdom will virtue truth glory Figure T also now has nine relational principles difference concordance contrariety beginning middle end majority equality minority reduced from fifteen Llull kept the combinatorial aspect of the process Correlatives Edit Llull introduced an aspect of the system called the correlatives just before the final transition to the Ternary Phase The correlatives first appear in a work called the Lectura super figuras Artis demonstrativae c 1285 7 and came to undergird his formulation of the nature of being 29 The doctrine of correlatives stipulates that everything at the level of being has a threefold structure agent patient act For example the divine principle goodness consists of that which does good agent that which receives good patient and to do good act Llull developed a system of Latin suffixes to express the correlatives i e bonitas goodness bonificans bonificatus bonificare This became the basis for proving that the divine principles are distinct yet equivalent in God each principle has the same underlying threefold structure yet retains its own unique correlatives This supports the combinatorial operation of the Art i e this means that in God goodness is greatness and greatness is goodness goodness is eternity and eternity is goodness etc the Lullian proof of the Trinity each divine principle has the three correlatives and together the principles comprise the Godhead therefore the Godhead is threefold and the Incarnation the active and passive correlatives are equivalent to matter and form and the trinitarian unfolding of being occurs on all levels of reality 30 Other works Edit Influence of Islam and early works Edit It has been pointed out that the Art s combinatorial mechanics bear a resemblance to zairja a device used by medieval Arab astrologers 31 32 The Art s reliance on divine attributes also has a certain similarity to the contemplation of the ninety nine Names of God in the Muslim tradition 33 Llull s familiarity with the Islamic intellectual tradition is evidenced by the fact that his first work 1271 2 was a compendium of Al Ghazali s logic 34 Dialogues Edit From early in his career Llull composed dialogues to enact the procedure of the Art 35 This is linked to the missionary aspect of the Art Llull conceived it as an instrument to convert all peoples of the world to Christianity and experimented with more popular genres to make it easier to understand His earliest and most well known dialogue is the Book of the Gentile and the Three Wise Men written in Catalan the 1270s and later translated into Latin It is framed as a meeting of three wise men a Muslim a Jew and a Christian and a Gentile in the woods They learn about the Lullian method when they encounter a set of trees with leaves inscribed with Lullian principles Lady Intelligence appears and informs them of the properties of the trees and the rules for implementing the leaves The wise men use the trees to prove their respective Articles of Faith to the Gentile although some of the Islamic tenets cannot be proved with the Lullian procedure and in the end the Gentile is converted to Christianity Llull also composed many other dialogues Later in his career when he became concerned with heretical activity in the Arts Faculty of the University of Paris he wrote disputations with philosophers as interlocutors 36 37 He also created a character for himself and he stars in many of these dialogues as the Christian wise man for instance Liber de quaestione valde alta et profunda composed in 1311 Tree diagrams Edit Llull structured many of his works around trees In some like the Book of the Gentile and the Three Wise Men the leaves of the trees stand for the combinatorial elements principles of the Art In other works a series of trees shows how the Art generates all encyclopedic knowledge The Tree of Science 1295 6 comprises sixteen trees ranging from earthly and moral to divine and pedagogical 38 Each tree is divided into seven parts roots trunk branches twigs leaves flowers fruits The roots always consist of the Lullian divine principles and from there the tree grows into the differentiated aspects of its respective category of reality 39 Novels Edit Ceramic ceiling light in the Sanctuary of Cura Puig de Randa Llull also wrote narrative prose drawing on the literary traditions of his time epic romance to express the Art These works were intended to communicate the potentially complex operations of the Art to a lay audience Blanquerna c 1276 83 is his most well known novel Felix 1287 9 is also notable although it was not widely circulated during his lifetime and was only available in Catalan It is formulated as a sort of Bildungsroman in which Felix the main character begins on a journey at the instigation of his father who has written the Book of Wonders The book is divided into ten chapters echoing the encyclopedic range of the Tree of Science as Felix gains knowledge God angels heavens elements plans minerals animals man Paradise and Hell It turns out to be a metafiction as Felix s journey ends at a monastery where he relates the Book of Wonders now embellished and fused with the account of his own adventures 40 Reception EditSee also Lullism Medieval Edit Academic theology Edit According to Llull s autobiographical Vita his Art was not received well at the University of Paris when he first presented it there in the 1280s This experience supposedly is what led him to revise the Art creating the tertiary version Llull s Art was never adopted by mainstream academia of the thirteenth and early fourteenth centuries but it did accrue quite a bit of interest A significant number of Lullian manuscripts were collected by the Carthusian monks of Paris at Vauvert and by several theologians who donated their manuscripts to the Sorbonne Library One disciple Thomas Le Myesier went so far as to create elaborate compilations of Llull s works including a manuscript dedicated to the queen of France 41 Ramon Llull with his disciple Thomas Le Myesier presenting three anthologies to the queen Opposition Edit In the 1360s the inquisitor Nicholas Eymerich condemned Lullism in Aragon He obtained a papal bull in 1376 to prohibit Lullian teaching although it proved ineffective In Paris Jean Gerson also issued a series of polemical writings against Lullism There was an official document issued to prohibit the Lullian Art from being taught in the Faculty of Theology 42 Early modern Edit Academic theology Edit Llull s most significant early modern proponent was Nicholas of Cusa He collected many works by Llull and adapted many aspects of Lullian thought for his own mystical theology 43 There was also growing interest in Lullism in Catalonia Italy and France Jacques Lefevre d Etaples published eight of Llull s books in 1499 1505 and 1516 Lefevre was therefore responsible for the first significant circulation of Llull s work in print outside of Catalonia 44 It is thought that the influence of Lullian works in Renaissance Italy coinciding with the rise of neoplatonism contributed to a development in metaphysics from a static Artistotelian notion of being to reality as a dynamic process 45 In Northern and Central Europe Lullism was adopted by Lutherans and Calvinists interested in promoting programs of theological humanism Gottfried Leibniz was exposed to these currents during his years in Mainz and Llull s Art clearly informed his De Arte Combinatoria 46 Pseudo Llull and alchemy Edit There is a significant body of alchemical treatises falsely attributed to Llull The two fundamental works of the corpus are the Testamentum and the Liber de secretis naturae seu de quinta essentia which both date to the fourteenth century 47 Occultists such as Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa and Giordano Bruno were inspired by these works 48 Despite Llull s growing identification with alchemy and Neoplatonic mysticism others such as Giulio Pace and Johann Heinrich Alsted were still interested in the Lullian Art as a universal logic even in the seventeenth century when Descartes and Ramus proposed competing systems 49 Iberian Revival and beatification Edit Meanwhile in Spain the Cardinal Francisco Jimenez de Cisneros Archbishop of Toledo had taken up Lullism for his project of reform Cisneros mobilized various intellectuals and editors founding chairs at universities and publishing Llull s works 50 Founded in 1633 the Pontifical College of La Sapiencia on Majorca became the epicenter for teaching Lullism The Franciscans from La Sapiencia were the ones to seek Llull s canonization at Rome in the seventeenth century These efforts were renewed in the eighteenth century but never succeeded 51 Llull was beatified in 1847 by Pope Pius IX His feast day was assigned to 30 June and is celebrated by the Third Order of St Francis 52 Twentieth and twenty first centuries Edit Scholarship Edit Llull is now recognized by scholars as significant in both the history of Catalan literature as well as intellectual history From 1906 to 1950 the Comissio Editora Lul liana led a project to edit Llull s works written in Catalan This series was called the Obres de Ramon Llull ORL In 1957 the Raimundus Lullus Institut was founded in Freiburg Germany to begin the work of editing Llull s Latin works This series is called the Raimundi Lulli Opera Latina ROL and is still ongoing 53 In 1990 the work on the Catalan texts was restarted with the Nova Edicio de les Obres de Ramon Llull NEORL 54 In the world of English language scholarship the work of Frances Yates on memory systems The Art of Memory published 1966 brought new interest to Ramon Llull as a figure in the history of cognitive systems Art and fiction Edit Llull has appeared in the art and literature of the last century especially in the genres of surrealism philosophical fantasy and metafiction Salvador Dali s alchemical thought was influenced by Ramon Llull and Dali incorporated the diagrams from the Lullian Art into his work called Alchimie des Philosophes 55 In 1937 Jorge Luis Borges wrote a snippet called Ramon Llull s Thinking Machine proposing the Lullian Art as a device to produce poetry 56 Other notable references to Ramon Llull are Aldous Huxley s short story The Death of Lully a fictionalized account aftermath of Llull s stoning in Tunis set aboard the Genoese ship that returned him to Mallorca 57 Paul Auster refers to Llull as Raymond Lull in his memoir The Invention of Solitude in the second part The Book of Memory Llull is also a major character in The Box of Delights a children s novel by poet John Masefield Other recognition Edit Llull s Art is sometimes recognized as a precursor to computer science and computation theory 58 With the discovery in 2001 of his lost manuscripts Ars notandi Ars eleccionis and Alia ars eleccionis Llull is also given credit for creating an electoral system now known as the Borda count and Condorcet criterion which Jean Charles de Borda and Nicolas de Condorcet independently proposed centuries later 59 Translations EditRamon Llull s New Rhetoric text and translation of Llull s Rethorica Nova edited and translated by Mark D Johnston Davis California Hermagoras Press 1994 Selected Works of Ramon Llull 1232 1316 edited and translated by Anthony Bonner Princeton N J Princeton University Press 1985 two volumes XXXI 1330 pp Contents vol 1 The Book of the Gentile and the Three Wise Men pp 93 305 Ars Demonstrativa pp 317 567 Ars Brevis pp 579 646 vol 2 Felix or the Book of Wonders pp 659 1107 Principles of Medicine pp 1119 1215 Flowers of Love and Flowers of Intelligence pp 1223 1256 Doctor Illuminatus A Ramon Llull Reader edited and translated by Anthony Bonner with a new translation of The Book of the Lover and the Beloved by Eve Bonner Princeton N J Princeton University Press 1994See also EditApologetics Catalan literature List of pioneers in computer science VolvelleReferences EditNotes Edit Anglicised as Raymond Lully Raymond Lull Latinized as Raimundus or Raymundus Lullus or Raimundo Lulio or Lullius Citations Edit Frances Yates Lull and Bruno 1982 in Collected Essays Lull amp Bruno vol I London Routledge amp Kegan Paul a b The History of Philosophy Vol IV Modern Philosophy From Descartes to Leibniz by Frederick C Copleston 1958 Anthony Bonner ed Doctor illuminatus A Ramon Llull Reader Princeton University Press 1993 p 82 Born 1232 per Mark D Johnston in Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy London Routledge 1998 Older sources such as versions of Encyclopaedia Britannica at least up to 1955 give 1235 the current Britannica gives 1232 33 Badia Lola Santanach Joan Soler Albert 2016 Ramon Llull as a Vernacular Writer Communicating a New Kind of Knowledge Woodbridge Tamesis Pereira Michela 1989 The Alchemical Corpus attributed to Raymond Lull London The Warburg Institute Bonner 2007 p 290 Donald Knuth 2006 The Art of Computer Programming Generating all trees vol 4 4 Addison Wesley Professional p 56 ISBN 978 0 321 33570 8 Bonner 2007 p 1 Cronologia Any Llull Generalitat de Catalunya Institut Ramon Llull Govern de les Illes Balears in Catalan Year 1257 Archived from the original on 2016 04 10 Retrieved 2023 04 25 Biografia Ramon Llull Associacio d Escriptors en Llengua Catalana in Catalan Retrieved 2023 04 25 Bonner Historical Background and Life an annotated Vita coaetanea at 10 11 in Bonner ed Doctor Illuminatus 1985 Llull Ramon 2010 A Contemporary Life Edited and translated by Anthony Bonner Barcelona Woodbridge Tamesis pp 33 35 ISBN 9781855661998 Llull Ramon 2010 A Contemporary Life Edited and translated by Anthony Bonner Barcelona Woodbridge Tamesis pp 37 39 ISBN 9781855661998 Churchill Leigh 2004 The Age of Knights amp Friars Popes amp Reformers Milton Keynes Authentic Media ISBN 1 84227 279 9 9781842272794 p 190 Mark David Johnston 1996 The Evangelical Rhetoric of Ramon Llull Lay Learning and Piety in the Christian West Around 1300 Oxford University Press pp 9 ISBN 978 0 19 509005 5 Blum Paul Richard 28 June 2013 Philosophy of Religion in the Renaissance Ashgate Publishing Ltd pp 1 ISBN 978 1 4094 8071 6 Paul Richard Blum Philosophy of Religion in the Renaissance Ashgate 2010 1 14 Who was Ramon Llull Centre de Documentacio Ramon Llull Universitat de Barcelona Archived from the original on 2013 03 13 Retrieved 2011 12 29 Turner William Raymond Lully The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 12 New York Robert Appleton Company 1911 31 January 2019 a b Albrecht Classen 5 March 2018 Toleration and Tolerance in Medieval European Literature Taylor amp Francis pp 280 ISBN 978 1 351 00106 9 Bonner Historical Background and Life the Vita coaetanea augmented and annotated at 10 11 34 37 in Bonner ed Doctor Illuminatus 1985 This Day In Jewish History 1306 King Philip The Fair Expels All France s Jews Lower Michael 2009 Ibn al Lihyani sultan of Tunis and would be Christian convert 1311 18 Mediterranean Historical Review 24 1 17 27 doi 10 1080 09518960903000744 S2CID 161432419 Llull Ramon 2010 A Contemporary Life Edited and translated by Anthony Bonner Barcelona Woodbridge Tamesis pp 10 11 ISBN 9781855661998 Basilica Sant Francesc Illes Balears a b Bonner 2007 p 121 Bonner 2007 p 26 Gaya Jordi 1979 La teoria luliana de los correlativos Historia de su formacion conceptual Universitat Freiburg im Breisgau Pring Mill R D F 1955 The Trinitarian World Picture of Ramon Lull Romanistisches Jahrbuch 7 229 256 Link David 2010 Scrambling T R U T H Rotating Letters as a Material Form of Thought in Variantology 4 On Deep Time Relations of Arts Sciences and Technologies in the Arabic Islamic World eds Siegfried Zielinski and Eckhard Furlus Cologne Konig 2010 215 266 Lohr Charles 1984 Christianus arabicus cuius nomen Raimundus Lullus Freiburger Zeitschrift fur Philosophie und Theologie 31 64 65 Lohr 1984 63 Lohr Charles 1967 Raimundus Lullus Compendium Logicae Algazelis Quellen Lehre und Stellung in der Geschichte der Logik Thesis Freiburg im Breisgau pp 93 130 Friedlein Roger 2004 Der Dialog bei Ramon Llull Literarische Gestaltung als apologetische Strategie Tubingen M Niemeyer ISBN 3484523182 van Steenberghen Fernand 1960 La signification de l oeuvre anti averroiste de Raymond Lull Estudios Lulianos 4 113 28 Imbach Ruedi 1987 Lulle face aux Averroistes parisiens in Raymond Lulle et le pays d Oc Toulouse Privat pp 261 82 English translation by Yanis Dambergs https lullianarts narpan net TreeOfScience TreeOfScience 1 pdf and https lullianarts narpan net TreeOfScience TreeOfScience2 pdf Anthony Bonner The structure of the Arbor scientiae Arbor Scientiae der Baum des Wissens von Ramon Lull Akten des Internationalen Kongresses aus Anlass des 40 jahrigen Jubilaums des Raimundus Lullus Instituts der Universitat Freiburg i Br ed Fernando Dominguez Reboiras Pere Villalba Varneda and Peter Walter Instrumenta Patristica et Mediaevalia Subsidia Lulliana 1 Turnhout Brepols 2002 pp 21 34 Dominguez Fernando Felix Summary Ramon Llull Database Retrieved 14 August 2021 Hillgarth J N 1971 Ramon Lull and Lullism in Fourteenth century France Oxford Clarendon Press Hillgarth 1971 269 Colomer Eusebio 1961 Nikolaus von Kues und Raimund Llull Berlin De Gruyter Hillgarth 1971 284 Lohr Charles 1988 Metaphysics In The Cambridge History of Renaissance Philosophy edited by C B Schmitt Quentin Skinner Eckhard Kessler and Jill Kraye 537 638 Cambridge Cambridge University Press Ramis Barcelo Rafael 2019 Academic Lullism from the Fourteenth to the Eighteenth Century in A Companion to Ramon Llull and Lullism Leiden Brill p 458 Pereira Michela 1990 Lullian Alchemy Aspects and Problems of the corpus of Alchemical Works Attributed to Ramon Llull Catalan Review Vol IV 1 2 41 54 Yates Frances 1964 Giordano Bruno and the Hermetic Tradition Chicago Chicago University Press pp 308 309 Hillgarth 1971 297 Rubi L B 2018 Lullism among French and Spanish Humanists of the Early 16th Century In A Companion to Ramon Llull and Lullism Leiden Brill Ramis Barcelo R 2018 Chapter 12 Academic Lullism from the Fourteenth to the Eighteenth Century In A Companion to Ramon Llull and Lullism Leiden Brill Habig Marion Ed 1959 The Franciscan Book of Saints Franciscan Herald Press RAIMVNDI LVLLI Opera latina Retrieved 11 September 2021 Nova Edicio de les Obres de Ramon Llull NEORL Retrieved 11 September 2021 SALVADOR DALI ALCHIMIE DES PHILOSOPHES Retrieved 11 September 2021 Ramon Llull s Thinking Machine in Borges Jorge Luis 1999 Selected Non fictions New York Viking pp 155 159 Huxley Aldous 1920 Limbo Chatto amp Windus Sales Ton 2011 Llull as Computer Scientist or Why Llull Was One of Us In Ramon Llull From the Ars Magna to Artificial Intelligence edited by Alexander Fido and Carles Sierra Barcelona Artificial Intelligence Research Institute 25 38 G Hagele amp F Pukelsheim 2001 Llull s writings on electoral systems Studia Lulliana 41 3 38 Archived from the original on 2006 02 07 Sources Edit Lola Badia Joan Santanach and Albert Soler Ramon Llull as a Vernacular Writer London Tamesis 2016 Anthony Bonner ed Doctor Illuminatus A Ramon Llull Reader Princeton University 1985 includes The Book of the Gentile and the Three Wise Men The Book of the Lover and the Beloved The Book of the Beasts and Ars brevis as well as Bonner s Historical Background and Life at 1 44 Llull s Thought at 45 56 Llull s Influence The History of Lullism at 57 71 Bonner Anthony 2007 The Art and Logic of Ramon Llull A User s Guide Leiden Brill Umberto Eco 2016 The Ars Magna by Ramon Llull Contributions to Science 12 1 47 50 doi 10 2436 20 7010 01 243 ISSN 2013 410X Alexander Fidora and Josep E Rubio Raimundus Lullus An Introduction to His Life Works and Thought Turnhout Brepols 2008 Mary Franklin Brown Reading the World Encyclopedic Writing in the Scholastic Age Chicago University of Chicago Press 2012 J N Hillgarth Ramon Lull and Lullism in Fourteenth Century France Oxford Clarendon Press 1971 Mark D Johnston The Spiritual Logic of Ramon Llull Oxford Clarenden Press 1987 Charles H Lohr Ramon Lull s Theory of Scientific Demonstration in Argumentationstheorie ed Klaus Jacobi Leiden Brill 1993 729 46 Michela Pereira The Alchemical Corpus attributed to Raymond Lull London The Warburg Institute 1989 R D F Pring Mill The Trinitarian World Picture of Ramon Lull Romanistisches Jahrbuch 7 1955 229 256 Frances Yates The Art of Memory London Routledge and Kegan Paul 1966 Frances Yates Lull and Bruno 1982 in Collected Essays Lull amp Bruno vol I London Routledge amp Kegan Paul External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ramon Llull Wikiquote has quotations related to Ramon Llull Wikisource has original works by or about Ramon Llull Works by Llull OL 148354A at the Open Library Works by Ramon Llull at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Ramon Llull at Internet Archive Priani Ernesto Ramon Llull In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Who was Ramon Llull Archived 2013 03 13 at the Wayback Machine Centre de Documentacio Ramon Llull Universitat de Barcelona Samuel M Zwemer Raymund Lull First Missionary to the Muslims Othmer MS 4 Ars brevis Ars abbreviata praedicanda at OPenn Ramon Llull at the AELC Association of Writers in Catalan Language Webpage in Catalan English and Spanish Ramon Llull lletrA UOC Open University of Catalonia Ramon Llull Database University of Barcelona Archived 2015 10 16 at the Wayback Machine Catholic Encyclopedia article of 1911 Blessed Raymond Lull Esteve Jaulent The Theory of Knowledge and the Unity of Man according to Ramon Llull Online Galleries History of Science Collections University of Oklahoma Libraries High resolution portrait of Ramon Llull in jpg and tiff format O Connor John J Robertson Edmund F Ramon Llull MacTutor History of Mathematics archive University of St Andrews Selected images from Practica compendiosa The College of Physicians of Philadelphia Digital Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ramon Llull amp oldid 1154847898, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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