Simone Simoni

Simone Simoni (1532, Lucca - 1602, Kraków) was an Italian philosopher and physician.

After graduating in medicine from the University of Padua, Simoni moved to Geneva, where he became professor of philosophy and engaged in controversy with Jakob Schegk. Expelled by the city for his heretical views, he moved to Paris and subsequently to Leipzig (where he was accused of Arianism in 1575) and Heidelberg (where he was forced to leave in 1579). In 1581, he became court physician to Rudolf II, Holy Roman Emperor in Prague; there were unconfirmed rumours that he had converted to Catholicism.

Simoni moved on to Poland to become court physician to Stephen Báthory. When the King died in 1586, Simoni was accused of having prescribed the wrong treatment and, after a bitter dispute, his rival Nicholas Buccella was appointed personal physician to the new king Sigismund III Vasa. SImoni moved to Moravia, where he spent the rest of his life.

Simoni wrote a commentary on Aristotle's De Sensu. He gave a notably crisp formulation to the principle that physicians should undergo preliminary preparation in Aristotelian natural philosophy: Ubi desinit physicus, ibi medicus incipit [The physician starts where the natural philosopher leaves off].[1]

Works

  • Artificiosa curandae pestis methodu, 1576
gollark: A product type is thing *and* other thing because the set of possible values is the Cartesian product of the sets of things its components can be.
gollark: A sum type is something *or* something else.
gollark: What is the information of a sum type, also?
gollark: The information is undefined, I mean.
gollark: Too bad, orbital caring lasers *are* bearing down on your position.

References

  1. Charles B. Schmitt, 'Aristotle among the physicians', in Andrew Wear et al., eds., The Medical renaissance of the sixteenth century, Cambridge University Press, 1985, p.12


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