Giordano Bruno
Transcription
Giordano Bruno
OFFPRIIIITFROM Giordano Bruno Philosopherof the Renaissance Editedby HILARY GATTI O Hilary Gatti and the contributors,2002 ASHGATE \J ;-'i'''- L..'- C}IAP'IE,R I'L,N Giordano Bruno and Astrology LeenSpruit Bruno's attitude tor,vardsastrolog)'r,vasn.rultifaceted. In his earlv as rvell as in his later lvorks, he leveliedvarious attrcks rgrrinst ertrol,.,gr,'., yet crneof lris first rvorks, the lost De segni de' tentpi, ,u,rs prol.,ablv an astrological trearise.rMoreover, in Spaccictde la bestid trionfante and, other works, he end.rsed thc horoscope of religio's,, and,in Libri Aristotelis pht'siconrm explanati, composed in thc late 1.!g0s, he explained generation and corruption drarving on clcarly asfrological co n cept s .A ' ls o in his m a g i c a lw o rk s h e e n d o rs e da strol ogi calconceprs. And at the verl- moment of his arrest in venice, he rvas in possessionof a ma n us c r iptent it ledD e s i g i l l i sH e rm e ti s , P tt)l t)n toL,i ct a1i ,.,y11111, copi ed i n Pa d ua bv his pupil Be s l e r.' T h e s ei l p p a r-e n tl cy o nfl i cti ngatti rudesare t. be understood in thc light of the specificcultural contexr of Bruno's intellectualforrnation'ancl activitv. .l Be n v een 300 a. d 1 7 0 0 rrs rro i ,rg \' \\' i ìs d e e me dt o be nci ther obscure nor implausible.It was an integratedpart of Europeernlife and cultr.rre. Astrological ideas irnclpracticesrvere vitallr.involved in philosophy,the arts and sciences.Astrology's appeal lay in the fact that it offerecl allegcdll' useful informari.n, s.merimes inaccessibleby any other means' while it looked and operated like a science.Ir r,vasacceptedby c'rutstandingscientistsand philosophers, such as ptolomeus, Thomas Aquinas, cardano and Joha'nes Kepler. During the Renaiss:rnce it r,vas even taught in many universitiesas an academicdiscipline.It w,asnot an Llncontroversialdiscipline,however.Sinceits introduction in the western world it had been attacked by a host of opponents, incruding cicero, Sextus Empiricus, Avicenna, Nicole oresme and Giovanni pìco della Mirandola. It was condemnedb1' various Catholic councils anc1,ciu''g t - Cf . l n f i r t i t t t , l ì l ) 1 , p . 42 9 ; L ) e r e r wn p r in c., p > OLlll, p p . 5 39_4 l . 2 c ì rtr d a n o B r u n o . ( ì l i iu m i n d p ciita n i e Ia ' p e r ig r in d tio ' europeíi , ed. E . canone, 1992, c ì a s s i n o : u n i v e r s i r à d e g li Stu d i, p . 8 3 ; cf. Ricci, S. 12000), cutrtl art. B rrut. nelL'Euro p ad e l C i n q u e c e nto ,Ro m e : Sa le r n oEd itr ice ,p p . 1 l- 5 _ lg. -l T hr s v i e r . vi s d i s c u s s e cl b v In g e g n o ,A. ( 1 9 6 7 ) ,' Eim ctisr n o e oroscopo cl el l eretrgroni nc I I <tS pa c c i ob r u n i a n o ' , i n Rin a scim e n to ,1 8 , p p . 1 5 7 - 7 4 . a <-f. L i l , r i l b 1 s . A r i s t ,tt.,BOI lll. n n . ìo o - x. 5 Firp o , P r c t c e s s op,p . 1t 6 . 1 8 - . 1 q j :n d 2 8 6 - 8 *; scea lso pp. l _2,32,;rncl 60-61. 230 GIORDANO BRUNO the Renaissance,by Protestant theologians, including Luther and Calvin.nBy contrast, Melanchthon defendedastrology,-and exponents of the Roman Catholic hierarch,v,including several popes, had their personal astrologers.t Moreover, many early modern scientists and philosophers dissociated themselves from astrological ideas, while covertly courting them. It rvas only in about 1700 that astrology lost irs footing in elite and educatedEuropean culture. The very term 'astrology', like science or religion. conceals a c hallengin g mu l ti p l i c i ty o f i d e a s a n d acti vi ti es. ' A stronomy' and 'astrology' were often used interchangeably."Moreover, Ptolemarc technical horoscopic astrology is not to be cor-rfusedwith Arabic astrolog,v,dominated by the conception of the great conjunctions. And the use of astrologyin medicine,agricultureand navigation is essentially different from the astrological backgror-rndof the various forms of divination during the Middie Ages and the Renaissance.Therefore, a brief survey of the developmentof astrology and of argumentspro and contra is surely helpful to assessBruno's viervs on astrology. Critical studies on Bruno, taking inîo accclunt the impact of astrology, have dwelt on the use of astrologicalimagesin his mnemotechnicalworks or elseon the specificcultural context of l-riscosmologyand its political and et hieal im p l i c a ti o n s .' ' T h rs e h a p tc r p r opose\ a more encompassi ng classification of Brr-rno'smost significant texts on astrology, and an analysis of the possible relatior-rshipsbetween astrology and Bruno's 6 Calvrn, , t,e r tisse m e n tco n tr e l'astrol ogi e j udi ci di re, ed. O. \4i l l et, J ( 1 9 1 1 .5 )Ad G é n ò v e :D r o z . - S e e( ì a r o r r , S. ( i9 U6 ) , ' M e l:r n ch th o n ' sa str o logv', tn'A strol ogi hal l uci nati '. S tarsand the L'.ndof the Wrtrld in Luther's Time, ed. P Zambelli, IJerlir ancl Ì!en' York: Walter de G r u v t e r e d i t o r i, p p . 1 0 9 - l2 l; a n d Be llu cci, D. ( 1988),'l \4él anchthon et l a défensede I'astrologie', tn Bihliothèque d'Humanisme et de la Renaissance,50, pp. 587-622. 8 C:rroti, S. (1983), L'astroktgid in ltalia. Profezie, oroscolti e segreti celesti, dagli zodiaci ryntrni alla tradizione islamica, ddlle corti rinascintentali alle scuole moderne: storia, tlocumenti, personttggi, Rome: Neivton Compton editori, pp. 231-46. e C f . C a ssio d o r a s,ln stitu tio n e s,Il.iii, 6 ; lsid ore of S evi l l e,F,t1'tnokryi ae,l l .27;H ugo o i S a i n t - V i c t o r ,Did a sca lio n ,ll.l0 . F o r d iscu ssio n,seeLej bou'i cz,M. (1988), 'l -e choc des t r a d u c t i o n s ar a b o - la tin e s d u Xlle siè cle e t se s conséquencesdans l :r spéci al i sati on et la sciencid iudicandi', sémantique d'astrologia ct d'astronomia: Don'rinic Gr.rncliss:rlinr-rs rnTransfert de trtcabulaire dans les sciences,eds. ìr4. (ìroult, P. Louis andJ. Rogcr, Paris: CNRS, pp. 273-76. 1 0 C f . I n g e g n o , A. ( 1 9 7 8 ) , ' Er m e tism o e o roscopo cl el l e rel i gronr nel l o S paccru bruniano', cit., and idem, Cosmok;gia e filosofia nel pensiero di Giordano Bruno, F l o r e n c c :L a Nu o va lta lia e d itr ice , ch . l- 2 ; Ga r in, E . (19821, Lo zodi acetdel l a ui ta. La polemica sull'astroktgia ddl 'lrecerfto dl Cinquec.ento,Rome-Birri: Latcrza, (first edition: 1 9 7 6 ) , p . 1 2 4 f; a n cl r e ce n tlvPo m p e o F a r a co vi,O., (1966), S cri tto negl i astri . L'astrol ogi a nelld culturd dell'C)ccidente, Venezia: Marsilio, pp. 25-5-9. See also N4.A. Cranada's i n t r o d u c t i o n to F u r o r i, BOe u C VIl, p p . xviii- xxxix. CIORDANO BRUNOAND ASTROLOGY l)1 L .) | .IrJ t,tILtI F IC TN T R E N TINI F L O. MEDTCI, A T e_-v E p H I L ofophi celeberrirni, JDE vITA LIBRI TREs: q Io Rv M r. De Stultoforumfanitate tuenda. r r. De Vita prod*cencla. | | t. D e llita telitas comparunrla. C v rt Indicercrun memorabilium copiolìffimo. 't frl trl Fl H I I.{ É o w r-l H z z a L APVD SYB / G D rr{r, G V L I E L . R OVI[. Sg:= ::IE T O, IJ6 7 , 1 0 .1 Frontispiece of Ficino's De uita libri tres, containing De uita coelitus comptlrandd,[ 1489], 1576. 232 CTORLANO BRUNO broader philosophicalvier'vs,taking into account also such viervsas the animation of celestial bodies and celestial influence on the terrestrial wor ld in ge n e ra l . Astrology: A Historical Survey Greecebecameaccluaintecl with Babylonian astrology in the early third century gc. The Greeks did not simply take over Babylonian astrology. Mesopotamic divination had mostly concernedpublic welfare and the life of rulers. By contrast, the Greeks were interestedin the individual horoscope,which was developedin the secondcentury ec \,viththe ard of theoretical arstronomy.Although the ide:r of celestialir.rfluencewas rvidely acceptedin the ancient world, most philosophical schoolswere hostile to astrokrgy, especiallythe Epicureans and the Sceptics.r'Yet, c om pler i n te rre l a ti o n s d e v e l o p e d b etw een P l atoni c and S toi c philosophl', and in virtue of the assun.rptionof causal links between celestialbodiesanclmetals,plants, stonesanclpilrts of the (human) bocly also rvith contemporary scientificdisciplines,most notably mineralogy, botanics,alcheml',zookrgy,physiology :rnd medicine. The Stoic conceptions of universal sympirthy and deterrninism became importanr axioms in Greek and Roman astrologl'.rr ls1s1' astrologicaltheorieswere also underpinned by Platonic astral theology. M os t anc i e n t a s tro l o g e rs d i c l n o t refl ect upon the phi l osophi cal assumptionsand implications of their discipline,horvever.An important exceptionis Ptolomaeus,who regardedastrologyas a rational technique rvith its orn'nlogic, grounded on astronomicalobservationsand on vlews der iv ec l f r o m Sto i c a n d Ari s to te l i an phi l osophy. A ccordi ng to Ptolomaeus,the ether emanatesa power which causeschangesin the sublunar rvorld. According to their position and specific powers, the effluencesof moon, sun and planetshave their own effects.The task of astrologf is to calculate these effects.His synthesis,which postuletted l l I t s h ou ld lr e r em e m b e r e d th a t th e Ep i cureans \vere among the targets of M e l a n c h t h o n ' s co n d e m n r r tio r .ro f th c cr itics o f astrokrgv; cf. C aroti , 'N 4cl :rnchthon's : r s t r o l o g r . ' o. p . cit., p . [ 1 6 . l : f h e i rr flu e n ceo f a str o lo g v u p o n Sto icisr ni s di ffi cul t to:ìssess. A strol ogv rvas at m o s t a s u b o r clin a tefe a tu r e o f th e e a r lie r Sto ic i nterest i n di vi nati on and al so i n l ater a u t h o r s . s u c h r r s,Pa n e tiu s,th e r e is n o in te r e st fo r'harcl 'l l strol og]'. S ee[.orrg, A .11982), ' A s t r o l o g r ' : : :r r g u m e n ts p r o a n d co n tr a ' . in .f . Ba r n esand J. B runschw i g (eds),S ci encednd Slteculttiort. Studies in Hellanistic Thertrl' arttl Prdctice, Cambridge: Cambrìclge LÌniversitr P r e s s ,p p . 1 65 - 9 2 , o r r p p . 1 6 7 - 7 1 . ( lf. a lso io ppol <;, A .\{. (19t14),'Lastrol ogi :r nel l o stoìcisrncrantico', in G. Gi:innantoni :rncl N,f.Vegettì (ccls),La scienza e//eri-slica,Naples: B i b l i o p o l i s , pp . 7 3 - 9 l, o n p p . 8 9 - 9 0 . (;IORDANO BRLINOAND ASTROI-OGY L.).) that the celestial and terrestrial orders are correlated but not to be identified, was crucial for many later: developments. ptolomaeus e n d o rsedA r is t ot elia n p h i l o s o p h y ,b u t a s a n a s tr ol oger he c.ul d not e n te rta ina phy s ic alt h e o ry w h i c h r,rn d e rmi n eth s e uni ty of the cosmos. lndeed, in his Tetrabiblos, which was centrecl ar.un.l the iclea that heavenlyinfluenceswere entirely physical,he attributed earthlv qualities to th e planet s .T hus , h e d e m y th o l o g i z e da s rro k rg y.and rel cted di urnal and seasonalchangesto the elementaleffectsof sun, moon and planets.,, He held that celestialcausesof generaleffectsare alrvaysmore Dowerful th a n thos e r v hic h a ffe c t i n d i v i d u a l s i n i s o l a ti on, th...fo.e " r,t horoscopic astrol.gy was not a science,but should rather be seerras a co n j e ct ur alt ec hnique ., The ancient polemics against astrology srarred r,vith cricero. His arguments(differentfatesof twins, astronomicaldistancesand relativity of earthly locations'') vvereaccepredalso by later critics of astrology, such as Geminus a'd Plotinus. At the time of sextus Empiricus ancl Pìotinus,astrology was too powerful to be dismissedas 'rnconceivable madness',however.'oIndeed,Sextusattempteclto clemorishastrology by attacking its methodologicalprinciples,thus acknowledgingasrrologyas a f.rm of knowledge. He avoided rhetorical argumenrsancl formulated precise objections, such as the difficulry of determining the precise moment of birth and the need for a vasr casuistry.r-plotinus'aititude torvards astrology is more complex. As a platonist, he defencledthe organic unity of the physicaluniverseand was quite willing ro grant rhe celestial bodies causal influence on human affairs.,t He las'a srrons ll S u b s e q u e n t l l 'n, . r e d i ev:r l sch o o lm e n d iscu sse cl th e th o r n v questi on of how pi :rnets, t hough b e i n g e t c r n a l : r n d un ch a n g e a b le co , u ld p o sscsse lcn r e ntalpropcrti es. A l bcrt the (ì reat , f o r e x : r m p l e , f o r m ula te d th e fo llo r vin g so lu tio n : p la n cts have propcrri es, not rnas rnuc ha s t h e v a r c f : r s h io n e db v th e n r , b u t in a sm u ch a s th cv produca rh",.,.,i n,1r",ra, whic h is s u s c e p t i b l et o c o n tr a r ie tl,.T h is a llo r ,vsp la n cts t,.h a r .e ,qual i ti es and yet remai n t henrs elv e m s a d e , f q u i n t e sse n cese , ( 1 9 tì0 ) ,.T h e phvsi calasrronon' . e Ba r ke r p r ic- eB. and as t rofogv . f A l b c r t u s M i r g r .r r s' ,in .f .A. we ish e ìp I \e ò ,.)Alb , e r ttts Mngrru, antl the S crcnces, Jirront o: T o r o n r o L l n i v e r s i tvPr e ss,p p . 1 .5 - j- 1 g .5o,n p . 1 7 6 . l4 S e e I . n g , ' A s t r o k r g ,v:r r g u r îL ,r ìr s p r o e n J c,,,,tr a ,, o p . cit., pp. 178_g.ì; Faracovr, Scritto negli astri, op. cit., pp. 107-,{1 l5 (ì ic e r o , L ) e t l ì u i n a tictn e , e d . w. Ar m iste a cl F a lco n er, L.'drn: H ei ne.rann; C arnbridg e ,M A : H : r ^ ' a r d L J' ir .e r :sin ,p r e ss, 1 9 9 6 ( lst e d n l9 2 i) , II.gg_99, pp.,t70_g2. 16 De d ì u h t a t i o n e , 1 1 .8 9 , o p . cit., p , 4 7 2 . F .r a cr iticill di scussi * of crcero,s arllìinrcnts, see Faracovi, Scrittct negli ilstri, op. cit., pp. -i3_79. ll Sextus Empiricus, Atluersus mdthemitic.s, n.c;. Bur',, L.ncron: Heinerr:rnnl c ì ambridg e ,\ ' { A : F ì : r r v a r d L ]n ive r sitvp r e ss, l9 tì7 ("i. lst e cln 1 9 4 9), v; f6r di scussi .rr,see Farirccrvi,ScrittO negli dstri, op. cit., pp. 1-50-.5-1. t B L' n n e a d s I, 1 . 3 . 2 .F o r discu ssio n o f th e co n ce p to f ce le stia rinfl ucnce,see:N orti r,.l .r). ( 1986), ' c e l c s r i : r l i n f l u e n c c . T h e m a jo r p r e m iss .f :r sr r .kr g v' , i n Zambcl l i , A strrLrryi 234 GIORDANO BRL]NO opponent of orthodox claims, however, and he seemedto sympathize with a 'soft' version of astrology: astral influence is restricted to the body . ' ' Neoplatonic philosophy provided an overall theory for the effectsof the a wide range of phenomena due to the mutual sympathy bet'nveen various realms of reality. Therefore, later Neoplatonists associated astrologywith prayer,magic and theurgy.r"In their view, the human soul was split up in a garden variety of distinct facultiesand modes of being. Celestialinfluence was presumedto touch only the inferior soul, or at most the pneumatic body of the soul.r' They stuck to their view that the stars are only signs, not causes.Finalln in Hermetic philosophy, the planets mediated between the One and the sublunar world. The heavenly bodies are animated with a rational soul and responsiblefor the variety of terrestriai life." The hostility of the Church and the decay of learning account for the decline of astrology after the downfall of the western Roman empire. After the rise of Islam, however,it'becamerapidly an integratedelement of the Arabic culture. The Arabs collected Greek, Persian. Syrian and Indian materials, and integrated astrology in ar-relaborate universal philosophy of emanation.Thus, new conceptionsdeveloped,such as the theory of the great conjunctions.Arabic physiciansmade ample use of as t r ology fo r th e b e n e fi t o f th e ra py. N oti ceabl y, astrol ogy w as recognizedas a science,lvhile medicine, becauseof its missing link tcr philosophl',was held as an art.r'rThrough Arab mediation and the flood of Greek and Arabic translations, astrology found its way into Latin Europe. The symbolic interpretation of astrological referencesin the texts of Macrobius and Calcidius rvas crucial in the revival of twelfthcentury natural philosophy,'*and soon astrologyconqr.'erednot only the b a l l t r c ì n a t i , p p . 4 - 5 - 1 0 0 ; ( ìr a n t, E. ( 1 9 u 7 ) , 'Medi eval and R enai ssance schol asti c conceptirrrrsof the influence of the celestial region on the terrestrial', .lourrnl of Medieual a n à R e n d i s s a n ce Stu d ie s,1 7 , p p . 1 - 2 3 . 1 9 E n n c ad s,lll. l.- 5 - 6 ; cf. L o n g , ' Astr o lo g v: a rgumentspro and cotrtra', r p. ci t., n. 19; G a n d i l l a c , \ ' 1 . ( 1 9 6 0 ) ,' Astr e s, a n g e s e t g e n ie s chez Marsi l e Fi ci n', i n E . C l astel l i(ed.), L l m a n e s i n o e t e so te r ism o ,Pa d u a : CL ,DAM , p p . 85-109, on pp. 90-91' l 0 A s t r o lo g ica l te ch n iclu e sa s ' in te r r o g a tio n es':l nd 'el ecti ones'i ,veredevel opedi n thi s c u l t u r i r l m i l ie u . F o r d iscu ssio n ,se eF a r a co vi,Scr i tto negl i astri , op. ci t., p. 81f. 2 1 F o r t h is co n ccp tio n ir .rth e Re n a issa n cese , e Wal ker,D .P . (1958), 'The astral bodv i n 'V/arhurgdnd Courtauld lrtstitutes 2 1 pp. 119-3 3. Renaissancernedrcine',Journdl of the ' ' l2 North, J. ( 1 9 8 7 ) , ' M e d ie va l a sp cctso f cel esti ali nfl ucnce. A suney', i n P . C l urrv (ed.), Asrrolog1 Scienceand Society,\X/oolbridge and Wolfeboro: The Boydell Press,pp. 5-17. l l K l c i n - F r a n ke ,F .( 1 9 tì4 ) la , tr o m ttth e m a ticsi nl sl am.A S tudl ,onY trhannaIbnas-S dt's Book on Astrological Medicine, Zurich: Hildcshcim and Nerv York: (ìeorg Olms, pp. 1-8. l a C r e g o r l- ,T . ( 1 9 7 .5 ) ,' L a n o u ve llc id é e d e n ature ct de savoi r au X Il e si ècl e',i n R ' S . CIOIìDANO BRUNO AND AS]'ROI-OGY 235 u n i ve r s it ies , 2'but a l s o th e i m p e ri a l c o u rt o f Frederi ck II..o rhe resurgenceof medical astrology led to therapeutic applications of the mathematical arts of the quadrivium. These made necessarycareful planetarv observation and time measurement,which in turn was a stimulus for instrument desisn.rDuring the Middle Ages, rhe erisrence of celestial influence r,r,as widely accepted.In general, it was seen as fit and proper that what is more noble and more perfect should influence and guide what is less noble and less perfect. Yet, the issue was not uncontroversial.rù7hile Thomas Aquinas, .fohn of Ja.dun and Robert Anglicus endorsecla total d o ml n a nc e ov er t erre s tri a l b o d i e s , H e rv a e u s N atal i s, R i chard of Middleton, and Nicoie c)resme,thought that if the heavenswere ar resr changeand growth would still exist.ri After the rhirteenrh century, the astrologizingreading of Aristotelian natural philosophy became a topos of scholastic commentary and teaching.Albert the Great and Thomas Aquinas referredto Aristotelian texts on the causality of the celestialbodies within the sublunar world as a philosophical basis for asrrology."'Albert regarded astrorogy as a valid and useful science.tu Yer, although he was convinceclthat celestial influence was an important c:ruseof change in the sublunar world, he held that it was a concause.In his vierv,the soul undergoes'per accidens' the powers imprinted on the body by rhe motion of the heavens,thar rs, ciohen ancl Nf .\x/. warrofsk,v (cds), The cultural context cti Medieuttl Lcdrnutg, l)ordrc c h t : K l u w c r A c a d e rr ic Pu b lislie r s,p p . r 9 3 - 2 1 g ; se e a ls. i dcm l rggg],,Forme di e ideali si'rPerenell:r cultura medievale', ciornale critico della :.nll'.."n11 filosofia ^di rr,lrrdnLl,b , pl-r.l-61.. r-s Se e R . L e m a v , ' T h e r r u e p la ce o f a str o lo g v in m ccr ie valsci enceand phi l .sophy: tow!ìrds a definitìon', rn A-stro/og1lScienceantl Societ-y,op. cit., pp. 57_73. -" \ 4i c h a c l \ e o r t r ' r r g . t rJcd J\r r o lr ) g ) r r , r h c n r o ,r im p o r r :n t sei ence l ftcr ths,rl osv:!.1. (ì arc rt i,S . ( 1 9 9 4 ) , ' t _ ' a s t r o lo g ia ' in , L e tle r ico II e le scie r ìze p, a lermo, pp. l 3g_.5l , on pp. 139, 112; cf. idem ( 1994), 'Lastrologia nell'età di Federico II,, in Le scirrze alla cryte cli Federico //, Brepols. rr S e ev h i t e , L . ( 1 9 7 - t ),' \4 e d ica l a sr r o lo g e r sa r r clla te m e clier.al technol ogy', vi atutr,6, pp. 29. 5-3 0 8 . l3 F o r d i s c u s s i o n , s e e Gr a n t, F ì. ( .r9 8 7 ) , ' M e ciicvir r a n c r R enai ssanceschol asti c conc ept io n so f t h e i n f l u e n c eo f th e ce le stia lr e g io n o n th e tcr r e stri al ', .Journalof Medi eual tutd Renaissdnce.Studies,1 7, pp. i-23. 29 Ar: i s t o t e l i a ne x e g e s i sc u r r e n t in th e th ir te e n th ce n tu r v co m pi l cd thc doctri nesof l )e caeltt, Metereologics ancl De generaticne et corrul)tìone together with astrol6gical themes. A crucial tcxr is or Generatic;n and cctrruptioz, Ir.r0; cfr. also: De cderct, 1.2-3, MetereoLogics,I.2, 3 3 9a21-3, tr.2, 3.54b24-3 3 ; p hysics,11.2,194b13-14, yrr.1 , 242a13f, vilI.9,26.5b3.sf. -i0 F'or discrssi<'s't,see Speculum astrrnctntiaa, ed. Zambelli, p and S. caroti, pisa: D om us Gi a l i l e a n a , 7 9 7 7 ; an d Z a m b e lli, p . ( e d .) , T h e Sp e cu lum astrctn.mi ae and i ts E nigm a, f) o r d r e c h t : K l r - r w e rAca d cm r c p u b lish e r s,1 9 9 2 , 236 CìIORDANOBRLI,\O ' ruci al i n Thomas A qui nas' s only inas mu c h a s i t i s ' i l c tu s c < l rp o ri s ' . ' C def enc ewas th e v i e rvth a t th e s ta rs ' i n c l i n ed'br-rtdi d not' necessi tate'A. s celestialinfluenceregardedo111,the bodl" it did not rcpresenta senous menace for the irrtellectr-ralsoul, frce rvill or divine providence't' the standard defenceof astrologYin the later T}rornas'ssolution becat.ne Middle Ages. That the stars hacl onl,v an inclirect infhier.rceon human of astrologicaldcterminisrnas u'ell as the behaviour answeredcl-rarges were ilften inaccurate.Moreovet predictions criticism that astrtlogical rescued astrological medicinc. boclies granîing the stars power over Picrre d'Ailh' regardedastrologv flrrther: Other scholasticswent much theolog.v,and proposed of assisting as the highest science,capable m iracl es. as t r ologic a il n te rp re ta ti o n so f b rb l i c a l Orr the r.vhole,the relationshipsbetween astrology and Christianity were rather intricate. Ecclesiasticirlcondemnatìons were generall,v ins pir ed by th e o l o g i c a la n d e th i c a l m o tives, rather than bei rrgj usti fi ed b.v epistemological and scientific reasons' Manit Fathers attackecl asrrology for its demonic grigin ancl associatedit with idolatry and magic." ln late Antiquity, holvever,Isidore of Sevilledraw a distinctr6n benveena natural and a superstitiouspart of astrology." Ar-rdafter the trvelfth century, astrology becamean integrated part of western science and philosctphy.A certain amounr of clerical opposition remained aìso during rhe Middle Ages.,' And in the fourreenthcentury,Nicole c)resme stressedthc high degree clf vaguenessand uncertainty characterizing as t r ology ." ' H o w e v e r, e c c l es i a s ti c a l condemnati rl ns and vartous s c holar lya tta c k sd i d n o t e l i mi n a te:rs trol ogyfrom cul tural l i fe.' - . ì l P . Z a n r b e lli, T h e Sp e cu lu mttstr o n o n tia ca n d i ts E ni g,ma,op. c;t., p.69. l r l - i t t , T . ( 1 9 6 3 ) , L e s co r p s cé le ste sd a n s I' u n iuersda sdi nt'f homds tl 'A qLti tt,Louvatn: di scoveredover 130 passasc\ tn P u b l i c : r t i o n sUn ive r sita ir e sPa r is: Bc' a tr ice - N:r u w el aerts Thomas's u'ritings devotccl to celestiill influence and astrologY. l l B a l d i ni. tl. ( 2 0 0 i ) , ' T h e Ro m a n lr r clui si ti on's condemnati on of asfrol ogr': a n r c c e d e n t s ,r ca s6 n s a n d cg n se q u e n ce s' ,Cì. F r agni to \ed.), C burch, C ensctrshìpand C u l t u r e i n E ar h ' M o d e r n lta l1 ' ,Ca m b r id g e :Cìa m bri dgeU nìversi tvP ress,pp. 79-110' 1 4 A c k c r m :r n n Sr n o lle r ,L . \1 9 9 4 ) , Histtn y, P rctphecy,and the S tttrs.'fhe C hri sti an N .[: P ri l ceton L]ni vcrsi tvP ress,p.27. A s t r c t l o g .oyi [' ie r r e d ' Aill.t, 1 1 5 0 - 1 .1 2 0 ,Pr ir .r ce t on, S e ea l s o t h e stu d ie sb 1 ' t- e ib o u ' itzm e n tio n e d a b o ve. r5 Sec S. Car<tti, l)astrctlogia in ltalia, op. cit., pp' 17l-3, lor a cliscussion of the artrcles of the 1277 condcmnation regarding astrologv. -irr SeeNicole Oresme, 17977),Quaestio contra diuittítt()reshoroscopios, ed. S. Carotr, i ù A r c b i u e s d' h isto ir e d ctctr in a lee t litté r a ir e d u M o1'en A ge,43, pp' 201-310. A rnong the o p p o n e n t s a ls6 ( ìille s o f R6 m e a n cl He n r ,v o f Langcnstei n arc to be menti oned. S ee Ackermann Smoler, lllstorl', Prophecy, dnd tbe.Stars, pp. 32-6. .l: Thc conclemnations of Pictro D'Abilrro and Cecco D'Ascoh were not reducible tcr t h e i r a s t r o l o g ica lin te r e stsa lo n e . Se eG. F e d e r iciVc scovi ni ,'P eterof A b:rno and astrol ogy', i n A s t r o l o g y,Scie n ced, n d So cicty,o p .cit., p p 1 9 -39. (;IO RDANO BRU\ O AND T\ S' I RO I , O C ; \ 237 D 'ri ng t l- r eRenaiss a n c ea s rro l o g vd e v e l o p e da ccordi ng to di fferent stra n d s , r v it hout bei ' g r,rn i v e rs a l l ya c c e p te c l .By the earl y fi ftec' th ce n tu rv, a t r adit ion o f s c c r-rl aAr ri s to te l i a n i s m h a d esral .,,l rsi e.l i n thc n o rth er n I t alian univ crs i ti e sa p a rte rn o f c d u c a ti o n i n w hi ch astrol ogv h :rd a p r . m inenr place i n n a tu ra l p h i l .s o p h v . M a rsi l i . Fi ci no ntt" .k.ú judicial astrologl,' in hìs Disputatio contrLt iudiciurn astrctktgrtrum \1 4 7 7 ) , r ' r , hilein De u i ta (1 4 8 9 ) h e e n d o rs e c lfu n damental i ssuesof h o ro sc. pic as t r ologf i ' o rd e r to s u s ta i n h i s q u i te pecul i ar i cl ea.f a me d i ci ne of bodl a n d s o u l .r' T h e re d i s c ()v e ry-of ptol .maeus' Tetrabiblos mirrked a reîurn to tech'ical horcrsc,rpicastrology as ,ars c.n j e ct ur alis ' in Ca rd a n ..' " In p i e tro p o m p o n azzi , by conrrasr, ce l e sti a linf luenc ewas i n te rp re te di n d e te rmi r-ri s tic, tatal i sti cw ordi ngs. Th e mo r e t he as t r ol.g i c a l s y s te m b e c a m e re fi n e cl ,the more sagaci ty a n d i 'tellec t ual ef f or t w e re re q u i re d fo r i ts re fu tati on. Indced. pi co' s argued artack in Disputatirnes, did n.r succeeclin clisplacing 'vell astro l ogy f r or n t he u ' i v e rs i ty c u rri c u l a . Afte r p i c., asrrol o;y w as d e fe n d ed by pr of es si o n a l a s tro l o g e rs , i ' c l u d i n g B el l anti , pJnta,ro, Ga u ri co and G ir - r n ti n i , a n d b y h u ma n i s t schol ars, such as Me l i rn c ht hon, who n c v e r d o u b te d i ts s c i e n ti fi c accuracy.r,,A l s< r co n te m por ar y pr of e s s i o n a l a s tro n o m e rs . e m o ng rvhom w ere Re g i .m . nt anus , P eu rb a c h a n d Bi a n c h i r-ri ,c .n ti nued to practi se astro l o gy . A nd onc e th e C .p e r.i c a n s c h e m e w as ,ho-n t,, be astro n o m ic ally pr ac t i c a b l e , i t b e c a me i n e ' i ta b l e that i t shor-rl clbe a d a p te d t o as t r . logic a l n e e d s .T h u s , c o p e rn i c a n astronomy cl i d not co n sti tut e an . bs t ac l e , b u t ra th e r a s ti m u l u s fo r S chi ;ner,Gemma Fri si u s and Rheinhold to d e v e l o p a m o re p re c i s el srrol ogy.,, A t the turn of the century, Kepler attempted seriouslyto reform ,,n "ri.ol,rgy iò P om p e c r F a r a c o v i , o . ( 1 9 9 9 ) , ' r r r tr o d u zio n c' , in M arsi ri o Ftci n<t, S cri tti s ull'as t rol o g i a , \ { i l : r n : B i b lr .te ca Un ive r sa le Rizzo li, 1 9 9 9 , p p. .5-36, ri ghrl v arg'ecl that F ic in o ' s a p p a r e n t l v c h a n g in g a ttitu d c to wa r cls a str u lc,g uìh url cl not tre a..uu,rted f. r bv bio g r a p h i c a l o r p s l ch o lr g ica l e xp l:in ir tio ' s, b u t r a ìh e r b'hi s cl earry di sti nct a pprais al o f f a t a l i s t i c a n d c o n je ctu r a l str .r d s o f th is d iscip lr n e. S ec al s. w al ker, D .1,. ( 1986), ' F i c ì n o a n d a s t r o l o g v' , in ( ì.C. Ga r :fa g n in i ( e d .1 , L 4 a r r i 11n l i ci rto e i l ri torno tl i Plat one' F l o r e n c e :L . s . o l s c h ki, vo i. II. p p ..3 4 r - 9 ; Ka ske , cl.v. ( 19g6),.Fi ci no's shi fti ng at t rt uc lero w a r d s a s t r o l o g y .' ,in ib id ., vo l. ll, p p . 3 7 - l_ g 1 . 're See(ìrafton A. (1999), cdrdano's Cosmos. r-he \,vorrtrsdntl \ycyks ctf a Renaissartct: Astr.loger, cambridge, MA: Harvarcl unìversitl' press; p.mpeo Faraco'i, Scritto negrì d s t rt ' op. c i t . ' p . 2 4 0 f . A l s o o th e r Re n a issa n ce a u r h o r s,in clu clin gMel anchthon, thought 6f A rabic as tr o l o g v a s a l m o s t wo r th le ssin co m p a r iso n with p to le n r y ,s. a0 SeeGarìn, Lo zctdiaco della uita, op. cit., pp. 9.5_10o. al S ee N o r t h , J . D . ( j 9 tì9 ) , ' T h e r e lu cta n t r e vo lu tio n a ri cs: :ìstronom,v after Copernicus', in The LlnìuersalFrame. Historicdl Essaysin Astronomy, Naturttl phiiosopht, and Scientific Method, London: Hambledon press, pp. 17_32. 238 IIRUNO GIORDAT-O a r enewe d b a s i s ." An d e v e n G a l i l e o refl ected on and practi sed astrology.ll Bruno on Astrology Although Bruno drd not have a profound knowledge of astrology in its v ar ious a s p e c ts ,o th e w a s a c q u a i n te d w i th i ts basi c i deasot and His use and vierv of techniques,tu and with some astro]ogicaltreatises.oastrology depended upon the specific topic under discussion, and changed according to the various astrologicaltheories and practiceshe took into account. It has become a commonplace to mention rhat on several occasionshe referred to the theory of the great coniunctions. Similarly; in his mnemotechnicaltreatises,he used astrologicalimages" a l S e c Ke p le r , J. ( 1 9 4 1 ) , [) e fu n d a m e n tis astroktgi ae certi orìbus, i n Gesammel te C 'H . B eck'sche W e r A c , v o l. IV, e d . M . Ca sp a r a r icl F . H atnmc, N 4r.rnchen: V e r l t r g s b u c l- r h :r n d lu n F go . r d iscu ssio n , se e Sim on, C ì' (i 975), 'K epl er's astrol 6gr':rhe directior"rof :r rcforrn', in A. Beer :rncl P. Beer (ecJs),Kepler. Lour Hwtdred Yerirs,Oxford: P e r g a m o n P r e ss,p p . 4 3 9 - 1 8 ; F ie ld , J.V. ' Astr o logv i n K epl er'scosmol ogr'',i n A strttl ogy, S c i e n c ea , n d So cie tl' ,o p . cit., p p . 1 4 3 *7 0 . a . l D u r i n g h is sta l- ir r Pa d u a , Cìa lile ow' a s clenouncedto the l nqui si ti on for casti ng h o r e s c o p e s qse e th e d o cu m cn t p u b lish e d in Po ppi , A . (1993), C rentrtni ni , C al i l ei c gl i inquisitori del Santo a I'adoua, Paduir: (lentro Stucli Antoniani, pp. .51-4. For cliscussion of Cìalileì's Astrologica nowtulla, preserved rn the Nation:rl Librar.v in Florence, see Faracovi, Scrittt.tnegli astri, <tp.cit., pp. 250-.52. 4 4 N o t i ce th a t Br u n o ' s r e fe r cn ce sto a str o lo gi calvi ew s and practi cesare qui te vague :rnd do not permit Lrsto est:rbiish precise sources for either the views he accepted or the t a r g e t so f h ì s p o le m icsa n d sco r n . a 5 ( ì f . T cr cco ,F - .( 1 8 9 2 ) ,' L e fo n ti p iù r e ce n ti del l a fi l osofi a cl el B runo', i n R endi atnti tJella Realc Accatlemitt dei Lincei, Cllassedi scienzemorali, storiche e filologiche, serie V, v o l . I , p p . - 5 0 3 - 3 8 , - t8 - 5 - 6 2 2 ,ca p . VII; Stu r le se,R . (198-5),'S r.rB runo e Tvcho B rahe', R i n a s c i m e n to , 2 .5 , p p . 3 0 9 - 3 3 ; In g e g n o , ' F lr m eti snroe oroscopo del l e rel i gi oni nel l o Spaccictbruniano', op. cit.; idem, Qtsmologia e filosofia nel pensiero di Ciordano Bruno, op. cit., cap. l-ll; Faracovi, St:ritto negli astri, pp. 2.5.5-9; Granada, 'lntroduction', in Èzrori, BOer.r(lVIl, pp. xvir-xxxtx. 4 6 D e mo n a d e , BOL I.2 , p p . 4 0 0 - 4 0 1 . Se e al so D e i mag. comp., tsOL 1i .3, p. 10.3: ' A c c e d u n t c a e le stiu m e ffe ctu s p o te n tissim i co n si derandi , qui i n cardi nal i br.rsori enti s, occidentis et meridiei virtutem, principiurn et perfectionem conciperc ccnsentur. Hinc ea q u a e d e s o l str tia lib u s,a e q u in o ctia lib u s,m e d ia ed i ei mecl i aequenocti s puncti s, i n cl ui busse c i r c u l i m a i o r e s in te r se ca n t,a str o lo g i e t o m n is g cncri s di vi ni sLrmmoperecomrnendant.' 4 ' F o r e xa m p le , R. Stu r le se h a s sh o r vn th at B runo read Ol aus C i mbcr, D i ari unr d s t r o k . t g i c u me t m e te o r o lo g icu m( 1 5 8 6 ) ; se eh e r ' Bruno & B rahe', op. ci t., on pp. 324-25. C f . a l s o M a gia m a tb ., BOL lll, p p . - 5 0 1 - 3 . a E N o t a blv, th o se b v T è u ce r th e Ba b .vlo n ia ni n D e untbri s, B U I, p.3-5; cl . Lxpl ìcati o, in BOL I1.2, p. 123. ln Spaccietde la hestia trionfatúe, Bruno used images drawn frorn Hvginus, Poetica dstrorutmica, rct represent the expulsion of the vices and their r e p f a c e n r e ntb v th e vir tu e s. F o r d iscu ssio n , see C l ucas, S . (1999),'A morem, artcm, CIORDANO BRUNOAND ASTROLOGY 239 and reflectedon the position and role of the heavensin earthly marters. In his cosmological works, by contrast, he artecked mathematical astrology and astroiogical interpretations of extraordinary celestial phenomena,such as comets and nouae. Now, rvhile astroloqicarviews were endorsedin his expositionsof Aristotle'sphysicsancl in Àis magical lvorks, astrologywas also severelyattacked in the latter,most noticeably in De rerum principiis. Finally, when arrestedBruno was in possesslon of an astrological trearise, and during his t.al he openll defendecl astrology as a useful science.l"It is quite natural, in the light of these various positions and attitudes, to classify Bruno's reflections on astrologv according to distinct categories. Astrology and Astronomy Like many predecessclrsand contemporary authors, Bruno did not cl e a rl y dis t inguis h b e tw e e n a s tro l o g y a n d te chni cal astronomy. So me t im es , he us ed b o th te rm s i n te rc h a n g e abl n' ,, w hi l e i n hi s expositiclnsof Aristotle's physics,he took 'astrology' as a synonym for 'astronomy'.'' Thus, his polemics with (mathematical) 'vell-kno'uvn astronomy explains the fierce attack againstastrology rn De I'infinito: But he believedthat no orhercorporealentitieseristedbeyondthe eighth sphere,abovewhich the asrrologers of his tirne did not magiam, mtrtbesint. lìrunian inrages and the domestication .f the sotl', Zeitsprunge. F ors c hu n g e nz u r F r i l b e n Ne u ze it,3 , p p ..5 - 2 4 , wh o cite s.n p. 11: C atana, f.l tl l 7t, 'Narrative strucrure and rma5;eryin (ìiordano Bruno's Lo tporiio d, la bestit tri,:,rifante., warbLrrg I n s t i t u t e , M A d i sse r ta tio n ,e sp . p p . 2 r - 7 ; id e m ( 2 0 00), 'B runo's spaccro and Hvginus Poetica astrotomica', rn Bruniana é Carnpanelliana, 6, pp. 57_77. a', L. F i r p o , P r o c e s s o ,p p . 1 tì7 , 1 9 3 and 287. 5o Ca m o e r .a c r c t t . , B O L I.1 , p . 106. s , t F ig u r a t i c t ,B o L I . 4 , p. l- 5 6 :' \r a th e m a ticu s iìu te n ì ... q u i n.n purus est, cl etermrnat quidem formarn ad materiam, seclnon ad sensibilern,quater.ìusessentialerei censtitr-rtrvum princ ipiu m e x i s t i t , u t p i r t e t r n p e r sp ccti' a , m L r sicae r .l\tr o lo g ir ì ...'; Lìbri pl tys. A usror., B oL I ll, p . 3 2 1 : ' l n r e r h a s e sr e tia m a str ' lo g ia , q u a e p r o p iu s accedi t ad phvsi carn,no' t anlen est p h v s i c a ,q u i a e t s i d e g lo b is e t cir cu lisca e le stib u sco n siderat,non acci pi t hacc sub r: ì t lone Ì ìa t u r 2 ì e s, e d s u b o r d in e fa ti ve l fo r tu n a e se u sig n o r u m.'The backsround i s i n Aristotle, Physicd, ll, rertus 20, in tlol cutn Auerrois tnrnmentariis, J I vols, Venetus 1562-74, v o i . I V , f . - 5 . 5 v a:' De m o n str a nat u r e m & q u a e e x À.4 arhcn-rati ci s s ph,vsi ca magi s unt , ut P e r s p e c t i v a& , H a r mo n ica , & Astr .lo g ia ., C.i. De m o n ade, B Ot. 1.2,pp. :S l _l O, 'Q uì d est e c l v p s r s p r a e t c r u m b r a m i M u lta r u m ta m e n r e r llm i l l am causam atque inrpedim e n t u me s s ec o m p r eh e n d u n tp h vsici e t Astr o lo g i' ; De im mens.,l l l .7, B oL I.1, p. . 170: 'Nat u r a n l c r r a r e p u t a t is Astr o lo g ii g r a ve co r p u s e n im e n r ecl i oesseremotum effi ci ti s r" el s us pe n s u mc o n t r o s t : r gr r a ci jn r ict,r s cr n ( ) n cs, sa p r e n sq L ri busi l l e putavi t uncl i que lihrat . c ir c u m l a b i a e t h e r af ra ctu .' se e :r lso De r e r u r n p r ìn c., Bo L IIl , p. .53g.rvhcre B runo us ed t he t e r m ' a s t r o n o n . ì i f' or a str o lo se r s. CI O RDANO BR U N O 240 A s trol ogi cal supposi ti onsand c once i v ea n o th e r h e a v e n phantasiesalread.vreject this doctrine,u'hich is the more scr bv those u'ho developmore penctrrtinginsights... condemnecl dependsonlv on the becausethe reasonfor their equidistar-rce utterlv falsesuppositionof an immobileearth,againstu'hich all nature protests,and e\reryreasonhas come to claim and ever.uintellect:ìsserts." orderlvand well-informed Neither astrology nor its basic ideir, that is, celestial influence, are c ondem ne d h e re : Pto l e m a i c a s tro n omy and, by consequence, Aristotelian cosmology are Bruno's targets. Bruno argued for the unification of terrestrialanclcelestialphvsics.In his view, this unification entailedthat the motions of the celestialbodiesare not perfectly regular, and t hus c a n n o t b e c e p tu re d h v mathemati cal astronomy. B y forecastinglacks a theoreticalfoundatiorr,and consequence, astroloÉlical t her ef or ei s e s s e n ti a l l yu n c e rta i n .F o r th e samereason,B runo rej ectedi n De immenso the Platonic view of the 'ereat vear'.''' Great Conjunctions Frcm the ninth century onrvards,Jer,vishand Arab astrologers,notably A bu M a' sh a r a n d M e s h :r' a l l a h ,h a d c o nstructedthe techni que of the G r eat Con j u n c ti o n s .T h i s v i e w , w h i c h i s not to be found i n P tol emy, involved structuring time according to the aspectsberweenthe slowerm ov ing pl a n e ts- Sa tu rn ,J u p i ter a n d M a rs - through the zodi acalsi gns. This provicleda chronological framework on a scaleappropriate to the his t or y of re l i g i o n sa n d n a ti o n s .A s i m i l ar useof astrol ogyi n a pol i ti cal and r eligi o u sc o n te x t b e c a meq u i te c o mmon al so among R enai ssance aut hor s .P o m p o n a z z ia n d C a rd a n o e n dorsedthe horoscopeof rel i gi ons and pr ov i d e d a s tro l o g i c a l e rp l a n a ti ons for mi racl es." Jean B odi n formulated a sort of political astrology: nature moved according to mathematical laws and planetary circles. He believed that if these f undam en ta l p ri n c i p l e s w e re re c o gni zed, especi al l y by rul i ng t ) I n f i n ito , Bt) I, p . 4 2 9 : ' c p e r ò lu i, si fe r n r ò a non credereal tro corpo, che I'ottava s f e r a ,o l t r e l a q u a le g li a str o lo g rd i str o rte m p i llo n:ì\,cano conprcso al tro ci ekr ... In tanto t h c l c . r . t r u l o g r .h u r L tp p ,,.iu i,' n r( fJn t.r \i( L ( ) r ìJJIìnl l n{}qu(\l .r \rrìl crl /.t. ri ettc rtrr.ri pi tr c o n c l a n n a t ad a q u e i ch e m e g lio in te n d o n o ... p erché l a raggi one del l a l oro equrdi stanza depenclesolo ci:rl falsissirnosupposito della fission dc la tcrr:r; contra il quale crida tutta Ia n à t u r a , e p r ocla m a o g in ir a g g i,.n e ,c \cn tsn ziJ o gni rcgol ato c ben i nformato rntel l etto al fine.' 5 3 D e i m m e n so , lll.7 , BOt. L l, p p .3 6 7 - 7 2. R ecal l that B runo onl v apparentl v a c c e p t e dt h i s d o ctr in e tn Sp r tccict, BDl, p p . .5 7 7 - 8. i 4 P o n r po n a zziPie tr o ( l- 5 6 7 ) , Dc in ca r ia tio r tl àzs,Iìasi l aea,pp. 286-7. GIORDA\O ÌìRtiNO AND ASTROLOC\ 241 p o l i ti c ians , t he lat t e r w o u l c l b e i n a p o s i ti o n to mai ntai n pol i ti cal sta h rIit 1. " rn spaccio de la bestia trictnfante and other Bruno referrecl explicitly to the horoscope of religions,tuand in'vorks, later mnemotechnical rvorks he presentedastrologicalexplar-rations for religious phenomena, such as the biblical story of Mrses and rhe copper serpenr.'-Noricc, hcrwever,that in sltaccio Bruno made a purely instrumental use ,f traditional astrological motives and views, such as the horoscope of re l i g i ons , wit hout e n d o rs i n g th e c o s m o l o g i cal connotati ons of traditional astrology.j! Indeed, unlike conremporary authors, such as Tycho Brahe, Róslin and Cornelius Gemma,t, Bruno attempted to detach the explanation of extraordinary cosmic events,such as comets and noule, or new stars,from their traditional astrologicalconrext..,,In Spaccir,t and other works, he argued for the i-rnane*c. of divinity and reiected the hierarchical view of reality, underlying nrost tradiiional astrologv.Indeed,the physicalhomogeneityof the universeruled our the view of the sublunar world as just a reflection of the divine world and dominated by planets. ii (. f. ( . u r r p i o n , \ . ( ìr t,tr y' ,/r . A- ( /,.,,/,,.\rM ..iil,'trartotti stn LnJ H i st,,rl .i rt ' l q q4 r . T ltc t he t \ les t c r nT r a d i t i o r t , [ - o nd ,r n :Ar ke n ,r Pr n g u in Br ,,,ks,p . 3 9 6 . 56 Se eB D l , p p . - 5 7 7 - 8 ; De n o n a tle , BOI_ I.2 , p p .4 0 0 - 4 0 1 ; D e nagi a nath.,B ()Li l l , p' -501;D e r e r u n p r i r r c . , p p. - 5 4 0 - 4 1 .F o r d iscu ssio nse eIn g cg no, 'E rmeti sr.nee oroscopo dc lle reli g i o n i r r e l l oS p a c c l r -b,r u n ia n o ' , o 1 - rcir . . 5; I )e ì m t t g . c c t m p . , B o L I1 .3 , p . 1 0 2 : ' L ln u m ta m cn in m e nrori a revocari r,ol o. cruocl planet acs i m r l c sf a c i c si n r c bu s su b ie ctise t in fo r n .r a n d isÀ,fa g o r u mconsi l i o atque i psa pr,rri ex q' irere v i d c n r u r . I d e m cia b a lista r u m d .cr r in :r co n fir m a t et crempl um \{osi s, qui int erc lLr m , v e l u t i n e c e s s it:r te q u a d a m co iìct' s, a d ce r e r is atque l ovrs favore'r c ompara n d u m , v i t e ì l u m a L lr e u me r e xit, a d - Nfa r tisite n r te n r p e r ancl umsi ml l atque S arurni v ì oJ c t rt ia m a , è n c u n rs c r p e nte Íì :r d o r a n d u r no h ie cit; e t n tL r lr ,tllil r.i Jrre cst,.l uau occul ta at quc 'ela t a i n c i u s t u m . pe r ib u s tr - r md ict;s e sse p e r h ilìr r tlr r ... pr()ntcr nerci ,, quam s uperior u : mf o r m a r u r n c u m in fe r io r i m a te r ia co m p e r ta m e xp cr tanr si mul atquc occul ti rnr an: llogi: l m ;u n d c i m a g i n i b u se t sin r iìitu d in ib u sq u ib u scla mve lir ti i l l ccta dcscencl unt scseoue ({ìlllmtlll .ìllt.' ts spacci., BDI, p. - 56 0 : ' Qu csto m o n d o , to lt. scco n d o I'i nragi '.zi on cl e storri m at erna t i c i ,e d a c c e t r a f od a n o n p iu sa g g rfisici, tr a clr ,r a g li li p e r ipateti cis6n pi i r vani , nrrn s c nz af ru t t t l p r e s e n t e :p r i m a clivisoco r n c in t:r n te sfe r e ,e p o i ilisti nto i n ci rca quarant,otto imagrni ( n e l l e q u a l i i r . r t e n d o n op r im a m e n te p a r tito u n ciclo o ttavo, stel l i fcrà, detto c1a, f i r m a r n c n t o ) ,v i e n e ad e sscr ep r in cip i, e su g licr r od e l n o stro l av.r..' ' olgari s9 Tvcho Brahc, (l-573), l)e not,a et nullius deui memoria pritts uistt Stellr.,i.tftt l)/iden1 Arrrto a ndt. Christct 1572. Mensc Nrwemltri plinrum consl)ectd, Hauni:re, in opera ont nia, v. I . I , c d . l . L . E . l ) r e 1 ,e r ,Ha u n iir c, 1 9 1 3 , p p . 1 - 7 2 ; C. (ìernma, D c protl i gi osa specie, ,titurúque conretie, Eri nobis cffulsit dltior lunae sadibtrs,Antverniae. i.i7g. 6\ ) De i m r n e n s r , B O I t .2 , p . 2 8 : co n r ctse r e p :ìr ts o f th e n a tural course ,f cventslcf. ì den, I Y . 7 3 , B O L 1 . 2 ,p . 7 0 . On ' n .v:r c' , se e :itle n t,lV.9 , ilOl, 1 .2,p.51; i tl em,yI.20,L\OL 1. 2' pp. 22 3 ' 2 2 7 - 8 . F ' o r c liscu ssio nsce , In g e g n o ,' Er m e tism o c oroscopo cìel l erel i gi oni nellr' . \ pa , , r , , h r r r n i r n r ' ' . , r p. .ir . 242 CIORDANO BRUNO Ideas and the Celestidl'World The use of Teucer'sastrologicalimagesin Bruno'smnemotechnicsis rvell known and has been extensively discussed.o'More interesting for presentpurposesare Bruno's views on the heavensin theseworks: The forms of thingsare in the ideas,they are iu a certrin way in themselves; they are in heaven,in the period of heaven,in the in the effect,thev seninal and efficientc.luses;they are sìngularl,v ìn their own are in the light, in the externaland internalsenses ways."' The ideas pervade reality at all levels,thus laying the groundwork for various types of perception, cognition and, in Bruno's later works, action. Bruno integratedthe heavensand its periodum in the dynamrcs of the formal structure of reality. As in traditional philosophy, the heavensmediate between the realm of ideas and the material world. In another passage,Bruno confirmed that the heavenscontain the forms of the terrestrial world on a superior level, distinguishing between the c eles t ial w o rl d a n d th e i n te l l e c tu al heavens.ut Thus, B runo' s mnemotechnicalworks reveal that the heavens represent the 'corpus idearum' on a preciselevel of the schalanaturde,in betweenthe physical and the int'elligibleworld. The Heauens and the Sublundr World It was probably not before the end of the 1580s that Bruno started to develop a more preciseand explicit interestin astrology.His later works contain numerous referencesto the issue of celestialinfluence and the 6 l S e e , f or e xa m p le , De u m b r is, BUI, p p . 34--5, w i th a reference to Mani l i us, Astronomica, 11.227, and De umbris, p. 1501'Spacckt, BDl, p. -560. For discussion, see G a r i n , E . ( 1 9 6 0 ) ,' L e "e le zio n i" e il p r o b le m a d el l 'astrol ogi a',i n (ìastel l i , U ntanesi trtttc esoterismo, op. cit., pp. 17-37, on p. 37; Rossi, P. 17960), Clauis uniuersttlis. Arti della memrria e logica combinatoria dd Lullo a Leihriz, Milano and Napoli: Riccardo Ricciardi L,ditcrre,cap. IV; Yates, F. 11964), Gir:trdano Bruno and the Hermetic Tradition, London: R o r : t l e d g ea n d Ke g a n Pa u l, ch . XI id e n t \1 9 7 8 ) , The A rt of Memory, l .ondon: P engui n l ì o o k s , ( l s t e cln 1 9 6 6 ) ,p p .1 9 7 ff;F :r r a co vi Scr ittonegl i astri ,t>p. ci t.,pp.174-5,255. 6 2 D e u m b r is, BUI, p p .4 9 - - 5 0 :' Re r u m fo r m ae sunt ín i dei s, sunt quodammodo rn se i p s i s ; s u n t i n co e lo ; su r .r tin p e r io d o ca e li, su n t in c:rusi sproxi mi s semi n:rl i bus;sunt i n causis proximis efficientibus, sunt in individualiter in effectu, sunt in lumine, sunr in ( \ t r i n \ c ( ( ) 5 cn sL l,5 u n t in in r r in scc,r ,n ) o r ìo su o .' 6 t D e u m b r is, BUl, p . - 5 4 : ' Cu m cle ve n e r isad rati onem qua conformabere coel <r c o r p o r i , q u o d a n im a liu m in fe r io r u m e tia m viliu r n rati one non vi l i formas conti net, pedem n e f i g i t o , s e d n ita r is a cl in te lle ctu a lisca e li co n f ormi tatem, quocl toti us mundi formas p r a e s t a n t i o r im o d o p o ssid e t,q u a r n co e lcsti.' CiIORDANOBRUNO AND ASTROL()CY 243 impact of the heavenly bodies on rerrestrialevenrs,most notably their ro l e i n gr ounding ma g i c a l o p e ra ri o n s . T h i s speci fi c i nterest rs demonstratedby the fact that at the moment of his arrest he possessed the manuscript De sigillis Hermetis, Ptolomdei et alioium and confirmed by his defenceof astrology during the tr:ial.,', Dwelling on t he i s s u e ' Q u o mo d o g e n e r ati o et corrupuo perpetuentur', in his exposition of the fourth book of Aristotle's Meteorology, Bruno acknowledgedthat celestialmotions exerted a real influence on natural processes.,"Also in his magical works, Bruno showed an interest in astrology, attributing to the heavens a central position in the line of universalinflwxus,uo and associatingpsychorogical phenomena,such as fury and meiancholy,with distinct planets.oFor an adequatecomprehensionof Bruno's later views on astrology an analysisof his De rerum principiis is crucial. First, it is undoubtedly Bruno's most (astrological' work, since the theoretical assumptions underlying this treatiseare inspired by the fundamental correspondence between celestialand rerrestrialrealms and vicissitudes,mediared by a universal spirit, serving as a channel for the transmission of celestial influence. Second, Bruno formulated here more explicit objecrions against (some forms of) astrology than in earlier works, rejecting the possibility of astrological forecasting. In Bruno's view, there are infinitely many possible combinations of astral motions. And this conviction fuelled his harsh polemicsagainstthe deterministicstrandsof (horoscopic)astrology. In De r er um pri n c i p i i s B ru n o d i s ti n g u i s hed three rypes of correspondencebetweencelestialmotion and terrestrialevents.The first category regards circumstancesand fortunes, that is, events which develop during a relatively long period. The second and third cypes concern the seasonalchanges of generation and corruption, and the daily changes, respecrively.Discrssing the dominion of the pranets, Bruno referred to the traditional principles ruling the distinctions between the zodiacal signs, and between rhe various celestialqualities and virtues. consequently,he endorsedthe view thar celestialinfluence is transmitted according to astrological principles developed and generally accepted since the chaldeans." Then a historical survey 64 Se e' M e d i c i n e ' s e c t i on b e lo w. 6j see the astrologic:rl excursus in his comment on De generdtìone ú corruptictrte,ll, t e. 56, in L i b r i P h y s . A r i s t c tt.,BOI_ Ill, p p . 3 6 6 - 8 . Se ea lr e a d ,vSpacci o,B D i , p. 7g L 66 Thes. tle magia, BOL Ill, p. 457: .ordo the influ*rs' i.clucles .Deus, :Lsrra, daem one s ,e l e m e n t a ,n t i x t : i '; cf. De m a g ia m d th .,ÍlOL lll, p . 4 9 -3. 6r De ntagia, BOL III, p. ,{78. 68 De r c r t r m p r i n c . , B o L lll, p . - 5 4 0 :' d e q u o r u m e ffe ctib u se t potestati bi scogngscencl i s 244 GIORI)r\NO BRI-JNO follorvs regarding variolrs opinions on the dominion of the planets, among rvhich those of the Cìreeks,Pietro d'Abano and Trithemius. The order of planetaryinfluenceis obvior.rsto all of thcm, so Bruno affirmed, at least in so far as its effects are considered. As regards its cause, horvever,this order is known to the r'viseonly, rvho are capablc of astral m()tions.I)enomination and order of the sevenplanets calcr-rlating rvi th y is not onlv ' u a l d e re i e t ra ti o n ì c o n s c tna' (undoubtedl consonant the things ancl r,vithreason)but also confirmed by observation."" Quite surprisingly, lvhile accepting the vier.vthirt human dail.v life depends upon planetar,v influences and acknorvledging its ancient origin, Bruno apparently rejectcdin its entirety any technical astrology bi, r s ec lon o b s e rv a ti o n a r-rd c a l c u l a tion of cel esti al aspects i l nd configuraticrnsof,the planets, since the,v'neque aliquid cdLtsdnt,neqrle significant' (are neither things r.vhichcirusenor which signify).-''As on other occasions,Bruno's polcmics against (techntcal)astrology flows from his rejection of mirthernaticalapproaches in astron()my and in niì t ur al ph i l o s o p h y i n g e n c ra l .' l n d e e d, he di d not rej ect astrol ofl y as s uc h,but m o re p re c i s e l yw h a t h e c a l l e dthe ' supersti ti ousmani pul ati ons' of astrologicaltechniclues. ' Astrolclgicaltreatisescontain 'fragments of t r ut h' , c v e n th o u g h ' m i n g l e d w i th n u merousvani ti es' .-'B runo di d not sprecifverplicitl.v what thcse fragmcnts corrsistedof, but the context of r e m i t t o t c r r cl a str o lo g o s p r in cìp e s. p e n cs q tlo s haec pars i ntemeri ìf:ìvi detur ct ea tn ( ì \r ,r ì\t\ten\, ttr r i rl utcr \el ìt( l ìl l rri l l Li l tl nì .l i l r t c g r i t ; r t c r el 1 .1 ,1 Paiìl.r ilr in tcg r ir r tr n ( l h a l c l a c i so l i n r fir e r u n f u r tr .to ta t:tc.' 6 ' ) D c r e r u r tt 1 tr in c..P' Ol.III. p . .5 4 2 . -0 [ ) e r cr L tm p r in c., BOl. lll, p . 5 ' 1 ' { : ' Quocl atti net aurenr ad theori am et c o n s i d e r a t i on e n r p L r n e t:r r u n r e t d isp o sitio n cn r corundem i n i l l i s orbi bus cr.rnr i l l i s i ì s p c c t u u mv ar iis d ifle r e n tiise t f:r cie r u m ,o n r n in o r,i denturct sunt i nuti l ìs consi derl ti oni sl si gni fi c.rnt,ct i p s a ee n i r n s te llr ,r eq,u o d a d p a r ticu llr ia a ttin e t, n eqLrcal i qui d ci rusantr-reque i s t i p l a n e t a e ,d e q u ib u s n u n c clicim u s.cu r n istis r i hi l habent comn.ìunenìsi nomen; quae n tia cc:lu sa et cl evìni endiacl i l l as fi cti ones. ut quod c o n r n u n i o f or tc iu it e r ,e r te n cla scìe e is :r n n is i sti s di unri s ct ci rcui ti bus, fortasse ad d i c t r u n f u i t c t in tcllcctu m a b a r .r ticlL rin studi a i ntrti l i a et c o n f u n d e n d u n e t o ccu lta n clu mve r L r mcla t:ro p e r a et ad nrul ti pl i candr.rm v a n a f u i t r c l :r tu m a b a liclu o d e ccp to r ea c1o r clin csi l l orunr pl anetarurn,hoc est stel l artrntl q u : r p c r s u : , r sio nse e m e la b u n o r cce p ta fa cilc fu it hanc i gnor:rnti i rmusque adeo prop:rgarc q u ( ] p r o p a g a ta e st.' -1 C e n a de le ( ' .e n e r i,e d . C. i\q L r ile cch iaT, o ri no, l 9-5-5,p. 148:'S enza cogni zi one i l s r p e r c o m p u ta r e ... ò u n p a ssa te m p od a p a zzi' ; Canttcr. A i :rol ., B O[. L1, p. 155: phvsi cal b o c ì i e sa r e n ot to b e id e n tifie d r ,vjth' v:r n a em a th e mati corurr spcci es'.(l f. the attack on i dl e s o p h i s t a l g e b r aa n d co m p u t:ttio n in Slg . sl.q ,//.,BOL II.2,p.214. For thc contrast bctrvccn l p p r o a ch e sjti scie n ceand phi l cl sophl ',scc:rl so I)e Lt cttttstt, n r a t l r c m : r t i c:lla n d p h ,vsica a p r i n c i l t ì o e u n ct, e d . G. Aq u ile cch ia ,T r r r in o , 1 9 73, p. 19, Infi ni to, B D I, p. 479, and /)e i r n r n e n s o , l l l.3 , BOI- L l, p .3 4 0 ; itle n t.Y.5 , BOL I.2, p. 138. I ) t : r e ru m ltr in c:.,P;( ) Lltl, p . 5 4 6 . -) -3 I)e rerum princ.. P'OL tll, p. -549. (;lO RDA: - O BRI I NO AND AS' lRO I . O( ; \ 245 his rcasoningrevealsthat the broaclerconceptionof celesrialinfluenceis i n vo l ved. ' *I ndc ed, m a g i c a l o p e ra ti o n sp re s u p p o secorresponcl ence ancl interaction betrveenvarious realms of re:rlit1., ilnd thus also betlveenthe h e e venrar r c lr he r uhl u rrl r rv o rl d . Medicìne Fver sincelate A'tiquit)', :ìstrologyhad bee' c.ndemned and prohibited frequently b1- the catholic church. Horvever, ecclesiastical..nr.,... were not aimecl at astrology as such, but rathcr at astrcllogic:rl conceptionspresenringa real thrcat to christian faith ancl theology, in particular th.se clocrrinesregarding individual free r.vill ancl cvents of sacred or universal history. Large sectionsof (natural) astrology rverc tolerated, and b,v the beginning of the sixreenthcerltury astrolirgy ha.l penetrated the courts of popes ilnd cilrclinals. Thc delicate balallce benveerrprohibition and tolerancewas seri.usly perturbeclby SixtusV's restrictive bull coell et terroe (1.586).This bLrll rvas far from beins u n i ve rs allyac c ept ed ,a n d d u ri n g th e y e a rs 1 .!9 0 v ari ous di sti ngui shed members of the Roman c.atholic clergy :rrgued for less restrictive measuresagainst astrology.-' Considering rhis c.ontert, it should not co me as a s ur pr is et h a t b o th th e V e n e ti a na n c l th e R oman i nqui si tors d'uvelton Brun''s possessinga rvork.f jLrdicialastrcllogy.To his venetian judges,r'vhoaskeclfor elr-rcidations about De sigillisHerntetis, ptolomei et aliorum, Bruno ansu'eredthat the book rvas not written by him, but copied from a manuscripr b1' his srudenr Besler.-,'Ancr in later interrog:rtions,Bruno motivated his interest in this rvclrk with scientific curiositl',--and by referenceto Albert the Great'spositive comments on it.-t rhe interrogationsreported in the summary of Brilno's tri:rl f.rrnish other informaticln on his specificinterestir.rthis ,uvork: And.[.astrologl'] could be well ha'dled bv ;r Cìod-fearing mir., whri judge fron ,"vhichpnnciplésproceedthe' ,ighi an.ì to 1s 1ble.. fo-rbidd_er effects, a'd i'which gùisethevarèirnprementec.l b'vvirtue of the f'rces of the celestial clispositio'rs and the efficacyof imaqes + S e ea l s o D t , r e r t n n p r in c., I\( ) L III, p p . - S- r 2 - .1 . : i S e e U . B a l c l i n i , ' l n clu jsjzio ltc r ,r r l3 n ., e lsr r o lo g ia n e l secol o X V I: antecedenti . r: 1! llor1cì c o n s c g u e n z ed i u na co n d a n n a ' . fo r th co m in p . -6 Firpo, Proct,sso.p. 1bb: 'non c rlirr rl,rrrjrr..r;ni: io I'ho fatto tr:rscriverecla Lrnaltrcr libro scritto a nl:ìrì()'. To thc best of mv knolr,lecrge,this lr,ork has not been tr:ìcec.lyet. lt c . ns is t ed p r . b a b l ' o f a c o mp ila tio n c.m p a r a b le to De n r a g ia mathemati ca. -F i r p o . P r o r c - s ' s op,. 1 ll7 :' tlr .r e llach e ò d a lla a sr r o lo g iag ir - rdi ti ari a, ho cl cttoer h:ryur6 a' c ora p r o p o s i t o d i s t u d i a r ìap e r ve d e r c se h a ' e va ve r ità o c' n forrni tà al crrrra.' rs Fr r p c r ,P r c t c e s s op,. 1 9 3 :' p e r ch é Alb e r to \.{ a g n o n e ì str o ri bro I)e mi nerul i busne l a rrentione, et lo lotja nel loco dove tratta De intrginihus lapidunt ... ., 246 CìIORDANOBRUNC) by rvisemen and characters, andto judgewhetherthevareexecuted or by demons,who do not differ as to the effectingof marvellous worksby respecting signsand hoursandtreatingthe inferiormatter with ceremony,that is, r,vorksthat either damageor benefit mankind.I neverhad anv intentronof propagatingthat science, sinceI did not like that practice,exceptfor that part pertainingto greatlvcontribr-rtes to, as claimedor-r medicine,u'hich this science and Galenus.-" severaloccasions bv Hippocrates The belief in causal links between celestialbodies and metals, piants, stonesand parts of the (human) body had given rise, sinceAntiquitl', to c om plex in te rre l a ti o n s b e tw e e n a s trol ogy al l d medi ci ne. A s a consequence,Arabic and \íestern physicians made ample Llse of astrologyfor the purposeof medical diagnosisand therapy.The remarks quoted above, although probably expressedunder pressure,mark once more Bruno's changing attitude towards astrology during the last active years of his philosophical career, emphasizing its practical use ln medicine.Also in his 'medical'treatise,the Medicina lulliana, he argued for the usefulnessof specific astrological notions, most notably rhe positionsand aspectsof the heavenlybodies"'in the analysisand cure of diseases.t'In this same work, Bruno even provided an astrolclgical diagram for physicianswithout an astrologicalbackground." Celestial Influence: Planets and Souls Astrological culture was an ensemble of theories and practices that developed and evolved together,including attacks and defencesof all sorts. Renaissance astrologv was not a sharplv defined body of ' 9 F i r p o , Pr o ce sscs, p .2 8 7 :' e p o tr cb b e sta r c b cn i n mano d'un hr-romoti morato di D i o, c c h ' h a d a g i ud ica r c g l' e ffe tti le citi e t ille citi d a ch e pri nci pi procedono,e con che fornr,rsi Í n e t t o n o l n e sse cu tr o n eco n la vir ttì d e lle ce le sti di sposi ti oni et opere del f i magrni e i tutti convengonoi n questo, , c i r r a t t e r i ,o s j fa ccin o cla h u o m in i sa p ie n tio d :r d e n.roni iqual c h e c o n I ' o s s cr va n zad e i scg n i e d e i te m p i e tr a tta r ceremi ni osamentel a rnateri ai nfcri orc, e f f e t t u a n o c o sc r n :r r ilvig lio sein cla n n o e t in u tilità degl 'huorni ni . N on ho mat' havuto i r r r e n r i , ' n ed r p r ,r p lg a r c JcttJ \cie r ìliJ... p ( r r h u l a pratti i a mai rni pi acquc, r'(ectt(r s c c o r c l o r l u t l llr p ir r te clr ' a p p r r tie n c:r lla m e d icin a, el l a qLral epoti ssi nrarnenteconferi sce ( l u c s t i l\ c i c n t iiì. co r r c lp o cr iìtc e ( ìir le n o p iir vo ltc gri chno.'A s regards(ìal en:rrgui rrq f,rr ; ì \ i r l ) l ( ) q \ , r . r r i.lisp t' r s.r l' ìr ' f,r r r tclicin c. sce I- icin o. \1. (1i "6). I)c ui ti t, III.10, i r ()pt'ra r cp r in r lo r ir r o, l 9l l .ì), p.5-12. r , / r ? / / / . /l .i i r s i ì cr ( : lio r tr g .r cli l' .r ' .r sr r r( o ' l n i l , ' ,/. /r r ll.. lJ( ) 1 . lll. p . i' i2 9 1 . llr u n r, rei cl s erpìrcìtl r ro hi s rtstrol ri grcrtl i , r ) r ìi Ì ì í) t r L :r r n itt) r in ( tp tts.\tc r il.o ,\4 td . lu ll ..l J()l - Il l . pp.5l ì()-ti l . rnd p..i 9-ì for ì r r r ìr ..ì\lr ,.l r iu lìt. ltl t,t, t.tilt' ' ,. \i-rì, 'r-rìl ìì ' : ' ,( ) l lll. p p . .i- - 1 - - i. hei"r'ii er ' "','.,ì-f.ììl::H:iiì lli;lii'lil;i:iì:ìlì,ì:il];:s GIORDANO I]RUNO AND ASTROLOGY 1 +/ conceptionsand techniques.Its philosophical assumptionsconsisteclof an instable mixture of Aristotelian, Stoic ancr Neoplatonic i<1eas, regarding,respectively,the order of celestialbodies,determinismand the view of universal sympathy and antipathy. Some views, such as that of celestialinfluence,r'vereuniversallyaccepted,while orhers,such as those inherited from the Arabs, were not. Sometechniques,such as horoscoprc astrology, required a mathematical preparatlon not mastered bv all p rrcti t i oner s Betu'een his earlv and later works, Bruno's vier,v of astrology . developedfrom instrumentaluse and ironic scorn to a critical appraisal. In general, he deplored the credulity of his time ancl criricìzed the arbitrary nature of prediction and divinatio'. His criticism of astrology was also inspired by his rejectionof Aristotelian cosmologyas well as àf mathematical approachesin natural philosophy. By .nit.nrt, Bruno,s subsequentinterestin astrology was connectedto the more operationaÌ strand of his researchdu.ng the last yearsof his activity.Als. rn his later works, however,he remainedcritical of specificsectionsof astrology.He refused to attribute particular significanceto eclipsesand cometì, and held that the celestial bodies qua bodies can at most be siqns of te rre s t r ialev ent s . ' Bruno's criticismscan be traced in some of his 'predecessors'.Nicole Oresme, for example, thought that man was unable to know with precision the motions of celestial bcldies. Therefore, he regarded a str()logyas v agucan d i n h e re n rl yu n c e rta i rr.a n ,-la srrrl ogi calforei esti ng a_s utterly impossible. ln his Disputationes aduersirs astrolctgtdm diuinatricem,Pico argued that admitting a generalcelestialinfluenceon terrestrial phenomenadid entail that this influencecan be resolvecl intcl discernible relations'otbetween particular heavenly causes and co rre s ponding ear th l y e ffe c ts . A l s o Bru n o h e l d that the causaÌ relationships between the celestial and terrestrial worlds cannot be exactly traced, sincethe motions of the celestialbodies are not perfectly regular,and thereforeare not to be captured by systematicmathematical re l a ti ons . T hus , la c k i n g a th e o re ti c a l fo u n dati on, astrol ogi cal forecastingis essentiallyuncertain. In his later works, Bruno could not bring hirnserfto condemnastrology completeiy and radically as a rotal error. undoubtedly his cosmololy rernoved one of the bases of medical astrology, namely belief in the superioritl' of the heavensover the sublunar regions. yet, he took it for certain that heave'ly bodies exercised infiuences and determined tendencies,regarding both meteorologicalphenomena as well as the 8t D e i m m e n s o , B O L L 2 , p p . 2 6 4 - .5 248 GIORDANO BRT]NC) temper and disposition of bodies. Thus, he granted the efficiency of celestialbodiesin meteorology,magic and medicine.Notice, however,that B r uno did n o t e n d o rs ea n ) s tro n g v e rs i rtnof astral determi ni sm.Fi rst. to the motion of the ceiestialbodies,t' and man's soui is not sr-rbjected second,there exist infinite possibilrtiesfor the individuation of favourable or unfavourablemomentsto undertakea determinateaction.si Bruno's interest in astrology concerned two issues,namely (1) the correspondencebetween public rvelfareand celestialevents,and (2) its possibleapplication in magic and medicine.His rejection of horoscopic astrology, together with his acceptance of the theory of the great conjunctions, and a possibleuse of astrology in operational disciplines must be interpreted from the broader perspectivesafforded by his philosophy. Bruno endorsed two views, namely, the animation of the celestial bodies and the fundamental unity of natural reality, which constitutean ideal frame for astrology.However,while he took the basic fact of astrology - the existenceof celestial influence - for granted, Bruno attempted to explain it on a different theoreticalbasis. Thingsin the universeareorderedin sucha \\'aythat the,vmakeup admit and througha certaincontinuousflow the,'.a co-ordination, the celestial fron'rall thingsto all things.Accordingl-v, a progressiorr of thingsand in virtue of someindivisible divinitiesb.vconcession subduethe inferiorand lowest media,that is bv their influences, t hings .* " Bruno's ontology is inspired by the idea of a 'schala naturae' which entails that the ontological, cognitive and clperationaì orders are intimately linked" and hierarchically structured." lndeed, the physical 8 a C . f . D c t,in ttr lis, BOL lll, p . 6 ' 1 4 : ' ( ìo e li a str:r, vi ri di a prata! cantus etc. movent, a l l i c j r - r n tì,n c l i n a n t, n o n r a ;r iu n t.' 3 5 D e r c r u m p r ir r .,BOL lll, p . .5 6 - 5 . 8 6 D e v i n cu lis, BOL lll, p p . 6 9 1 - 2 :' Re s in uni verso i ta sunt ordi nat:ìe, ut i n un:r q u a d a m c o o r d in a tio n e co n sisr .u r r ,it;r u t c,' n tin uo quodam quasi fl uxu ab ornni br-rs p r o g r e s s i of i e r i p o ssit a d o m n ia ... Ita q u e n u m in a, pcr rerunì el argi ti onemet medi orum q u o r u n d a r r i r n p e r tib iliu m fa r ,o r e r n ,in fe r iu r a e t in fi nra tandem si bi dcvi nci unt i nfl uendo.' s ; D e l a cd n sij, o p . cit, p . I.5l: ' Pr in r a clu mque vogl i o chc noti ate essereuna e m e d e s i m i rs c alir ,p e r la q r - r a lela n a tu r a d e sce n d ea l l a produzzi on del l e cose,e I'i ntel l etto a s c c n c l ca l l a co g n izio n d i q u e lle ; e ch e l' u n o e l' a ltra c1:rti ni ti ì proccdc al l 'uni tà, p:rss:rndo p e r l a n . r c r l t i tu d indei m e zzi.' Cf. Su n m a te r n t. n îe t., B OL Ì.,+,p. 11-5:'qui buseadcm scri c p. 116: 'H oc ordi ne res et r e s c o g l r o s c u n tu rq u a e t co n stifu u n tu r e t co n fig u r antr-rr'1i dem, f i r . r n t e t c o g no sci cr istìm a n tu r a c::r u ssissu p e r iori bus, nobi s vero, qr,ri a sensi bi l i bus : r s c e n d i r n ua s d in te llig ib ilia ,co n tr a r jo o r clin ea tq u e seri e,rcci pi turpri us rtr.l ueprrsteri us'. 8 8 S e el ) c u m h r is, BUt, p p .3 4 - 5 ; De la ca u sa,op. ci t., pp. 12-5and 131; D e magi a, p p . ' l 0 i - 2 , 4 3 . 5; T /:e s.d e m a g ict,BOi- Iil. p .' 1 .5 7 ;D e nutgi a math.,IJOI- tl l , p.493. For obj ects,seeal so C artr.r-q, i n B OL d i s c u s s i o no n th c cr ig n ìtivefa cu ltie s,r e p r e se u t:ìtions:rncl 1 1 . 1 ,p p . 2 1 9 a n cì 2 3 5 Su n tm a te r m . m e t.,IìOL I.4, p. 11t1. CìIORDANOBRUNO AND ASTROLOCìY 249 homogeneitvof the universeand the existenceof all types of connecrron, correspondenceirnd interrelation betweenthe various levelsand realms of reality did not rule out a relative sr-rperiorityof the heavenst',and a hierarchy of superior intellects.'','Now, in Bruno's ontolop;g efficient causalityrvas attributed to soul or intellecr,and not to (moving) bodies. Thus, he did not have a purely physical vier,vof the workings of the planets."rTheir activity and influenceare grounded in their s.r-rl.',.And since their sor-rlsmay be superior to human souls, they are granted influence on terrestrial and human affairs. consequently, celestial influenceis not to be calculated,but captured irnd manipulated in otl-rer fashions, as is suggestedin Bruno's magical works, especiallyby his theory of 'vinculi'." In Bruno's vieu', magic, and in general all human action, is basedon the doctrine of matter and its infinite vitality, rather than on the doctrine of analogy between heavensand E,arth.The ratrer rs seen as an aspect of the Inore global phenomenon of universal interaction betweenall levelsof realitv. x e l) e t ' i n c u l i s ,B O L I II, p . 6 7 6 : ' a str a e r r .ìa g n iì m u n d i a n i m.l i a seu numi 'a, qui bus def at iga t i o < n o n > a c c i c l it,e t in q u ib u s e fflu xio e t in ilu xio substanti al i sacqual i s est et c ac lem. . . ' . e0 S e e ,a n r o n g r t h c r s , De u n tb r is,Blll, p .3 l; Da la ca u sa ,.p. crt., p. i .5.t. R ecal l that in De g l i e r t t i c ìf t r r o r i , t h e :r sce n to f th c so u l r v:r sg r o u n d e d in a progrcssi yeassi mi l ati ont9 t he rrro d ec r f c o g n i t i . r o f th e su p e r i' r in te lle cr s;cf. p u r o r i, BDI, p. 99g; cl . Lantpas tri g. s t dt . , B O I . I I l , p . 1 5 0 , a n d L ib r i I' b 1 ,s.Ar isto t., p p . 2 6 1 - 2 . el R e c a l l t h a t l J r u n o d id n o t e cce p t th e in flu cn ceo f th e m o on on thc ti des i n C ena cl e le certeri, <r1-r.cit., p. 209 and that he rejected rhc efficiencv of astral ra,-sin f)e magta nt ot h. . B ( r L I l l . l . . 5 0 . ì . er F o r t h e a n i m a r i o n o f th c ce le stia lb o clie s, se e Ce n a , o p . ci t., pp. 7-S ,99-100, 1.50, 169 and 2 0 8 ( p r i n c i p l e o f life r n h e r e n t in a ll r vo r ld s) ; De la coustt,op. ci t., pp. 74_-I (t rnir. er s avl i t a l i s n i ) ; I n i i n i tct,llDI, p p .3 1 3 9 - 9 0 ;Or a t. u a le d .,BOL l .l , pp. 19-20; Lantpas t rig. s t t tt ' . B o l - t l l , p p . - 5 1- 3 ; De ín u r e n so .lll.tl, BOL r .1 ,3 7 6-7: 'A d quas ranouanr:rd c ognat i ì a s t r a j u s f o s c t h e r o e slclvo la r e cx h o c n u n d o n ' ,\r r i nìi ìi (,tc\ i Lrt cx reì.ri i si n.l c S omnio S c r p i o l t i sh : r h e n r u s)cr e d id e r u n t.Astla h u ju sm o d i in te l l i genti asensuquepraecl i ta c onf es t a n t u rc t i a r n C l h i l l da e ie t Ra b in i sa p ie n tio r e s,q u i L r b i.Jobi r,erb:rsunr: U ncl c crg6 s apic nti ar - e n i t ? ' e) D e u i n c u l i s ,B O L l l l , p p .6 8 3 . 6 9 1 - 6 ;Da m a g ìa ,p ,OL III, pp.428-5.ì, i n p:rrti cul .r, p. 436: ' V i n c r - r l l l nsl t l r ì t a n ir l:r e a str o r u r n e t p r in cip e slo co r u n r , ventorun.ì,el cmcntorunr.'