![VIVES, Joannes Ludovicus (1492-1540). De anima et vita libri tres. Basel: [Robert Winter, 1538].](https://www.christies.com/img/LotImages/1998/NYP/1998_NYP_08854_0225_000(104751).jpg?w=1)
細節
VIVES, Joannes Ludovicus (1492-1540). De anima et vita libri tres. Basel: [Robert Winter, 1538].
4o (223 x 140 mm). (Title-page and a few other leaves with wormtracks repaired, affecting some letters, some minor marginal dampstaining.) Contemporary limp vellum. Provenance: Liceo di Bergamo (library stamp on title, crossed-out by hand); Biblioteca Civica Bergamo (library stamp on title, crossed-out by hand, and duplicate stamp).
THE VERY RARE FIRST EDITION OF VIVES'S MOST IMPORTANT PSYCHOLOGICAL WORK. This copy is without the index at end: approximately half of the known copies are without the index, suggesting that some copies may have been sold before it was completed.
"Vives anticipated Bacon and Descartes in devoloping an empirical psychology in which the mind was to be studied both through introspection and observation of others. From his exhaustive analysis of memory he developed a theory of association of ideas, which recognized the emotional origin of certain associations, as well as the link between associations, emotions and memory. He was also the first to describe the physiological effects of fear" (Garrison-Morton). Vives maintained that the essence of the human mind was indescribable but could be known through the mind's actions. Garrison-Morton 4963.2; BM/STC German p. 898; Zilboorg & Henry, pp. 180-195; Norman 2159.
4
THE VERY RARE FIRST EDITION OF VIVES'S MOST IMPORTANT PSYCHOLOGICAL WORK. This copy is without the index at end: approximately half of the known copies are without the index, suggesting that some copies may have been sold before it was completed.
"Vives anticipated Bacon and Descartes in devoloping an empirical psychology in which the mind was to be studied both through introspection and observation of others. From his exhaustive analysis of memory he developed a theory of association of ideas, which recognized the emotional origin of certain associations, as well as the link between associations, emotions and memory. He was also the first to describe the physiological effects of fear" (Garrison-Morton). Vives maintained that the essence of the human mind was indescribable but could be known through the mind's actions. Garrison-Morton 4963.2; BM/STC German p. 898; Zilboorg & Henry, pp. 180-195; Norman 2159.