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Bernard de Lavinheta

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bernard de Lavinheta (died c. 1530) was a Basque Franciscan from Béarn, known as a teacher of the methods of Raymond Lull.[1]

Life

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He studied at Toulouse and taught at Salamanca. Later he came to Paris.[1]

Works

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His Explanatio compendiosaque applicatio artis Raymundi Lulli was published in 1523 in Lyon.[2] It combined the theories of Lull with alchemy and an encyclopedic theory.[1] Lavinheta also argues in it that the ars generalis of Lull is a memory technique that goes beyond the method of loci.[3]

A new edition of his works was published in 1612 by Johann Heinrich Alsted, for Lazarus Zetzner.[4]

References

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  • Paolo Rossi, Stephen Clucas (translator) (2006), Logic and the Art of Memory: the quest for a universal language

Notes

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  1. ^ a b c Anthony Bonner, Doctor illuminatus: a Ramón Llull reader (1993), p. 65; Google Books.
  2. ^ Howard Hotson, Paradise postponed: Johann Heinrich Alsted and the birth of Calvinist millenarianism (2000), p. 80.
  3. ^ Rossi, pp. 57–8.
  4. ^ Rossi, p. 80; Google Books.
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