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4to (199x148 mm). [40] leaves. Collation: A-K4. Title page within an architectural border bearing the monogram “FB” and the date 1521 at the bottom. 20th-century pale suede leather “à l'antique” with inked title on spine. With a few marginal annotations in a contemporary hand (the note on the final leaf is dated December 1525). Marginal repair to the lower outer corner of l. A3 with no loss of text, slightly uniformly browned, some marginal staining.
_x000D_First edition of this pamphlet attacking Luther's position on the marriage of priests and other reforms proposed by him and his followers. In particular, Arnoldi, who went from being one of Luther's teachers in Erfurt to becoming one of his fiercest opponents, responds to a book on the celibacy of the clergy by the Lutheran theologian Johannes Lang (1487-1548).
_x000D_Bartholomäus Arnoldi (also called Usingen after his birthplace) began his studies at the University of Erfurt in 1484. He became a Bachelor of Arts in 1486 and Master of Arts in 1491. He taught philosophy at Erfurt University for twenty-four years. In 1498, he became a member of the council of the faculty of arts and afterwards was active in several official positions. From 1501 to 1505, he was one of Luther's teachers in philosophy. During 1504 he was dean of the faculty and joined the Augustinian hermits in 1512. Two years later he was promoted Doctor of Theology and became actively involved in the German Counter Reformation and in particular opposed the Wittenberg reformers. In 1522, he became archdeacon. During the Peasant's War in 1525 he was forced to leave Erfurt and ended up in Würzburg, where he stayed at the local Augustinian monastery. During his last years, Arnoldi followed the local bishop, Konrad von Thüngen, in visitations to the monasteries and in the struggle with growing Protestantism. He appeared with him in the Diet of Augsburg, 1530, where he was appointed as a member of the commission to examine the Augsburg Confession and where he contributed to the writing of the Catholic Response. He died in Würzburg in 1532.
_x000D_As a philosopher, Arnoldi belonged to the ‘via moderna' school, as did all his colleagues at the Faculty of Philosophy in Erfurt. The ‘via moderna' was born in opposition to the ‘via antiquata' school. The ‘via antiquata' was followed in some universities (as the University of Leipzig) and tended to base their teaching exclusively on a particular tradition, following the method of authors such as Aquinas and Scotus and ignoring some of the more recent authors. Indeed, the philosophers and theologians who represented the ‘via moderna' method were committed to respecting other authoritative writers and to adopting some key doctrines. These authorities included, above all, Jean Buridan and William of Ockham, but also authors such as Gregory of Rimini, Peter of Ailly and Gabriel Biel. These doctrines included the use of the principle of parsimony, a moderately nominalist view of universals, and the denial of a real distinction between the powers of the soul as well as between the entities denoted by the Aristotelian categories other than substance and quality. This school opposition appears clear when we note that in the same year, 1499, two short treatises on natural philosophy were published, both written as commentaries on the same text by Peter of Dresden, the Parvulus philosophiae naturalis: one from Erfurt written by Arnoldi and the other by Johannes Peyligk, a Thomist philosopher from the University of Leipzig (cf. R. Bäumer, Bartholomäus von Usingen OESA, in: “Katholische Theologen der Reformationszeit”, 1985, vol. II, pp. 27-37).
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<p>4to (199x148 mm). [40] leaves. Collation: A-K<sup>4</sup>. Title page within an architectural border bearing the monogram &ldquo;FB&rdquo; and the date 1521 at the bottom. 20<sup>th</sup>-century pale suede leather &ldquo;&agrave; l'antique&rdquo; with inked title on spine. With a few marginal annotations in a contemporary hand (the note on the final leaf is dated December 1525). Marginal repair to the lower outer corner of l. A3 with no loss of text, slightly uniformly browned, some marginal staining.</p> <p>First edition of this pamphlet attacking Luther's position on the marriage of priests and other reforms proposed by him and his followers. In particular, Arnoldi, who went from being one of Luther's teachers in Erfurt to becoming one of his fiercest opponents, responds to a book on the celibacy of the clergy by the Lutheran theologian Johannes Lang (1487-1548).</p> <p>Bartholom&auml;us Arnoldi (also called Usingen after his birthplace) began his studies at the University of Erfurt in 1484. He became a Bachelor of Arts in 1486 and Master of Arts in 1491. He taught philosophy at Erfurt University for twenty-four years. In 1498, he became a member of the council of the faculty of arts and afterwards was active in several official positions. From 1501 to 1505, he was one of Luther's teachers in philosophy. During 1504 he was dean of the faculty and joined the Augustinian hermits in 1512. Two years later he was promoted Doctor of Theology and became actively involved in the German Counter Reformation and in particular opposed the Wittenberg reformers. In 1522, he became archdeacon. During the Peasant's War in 1525 he was forced to leave Erfurt and ended up in W&uuml;rzburg, where he stayed at the local Augustinian monastery. During his last years, Arnoldi followed the local bishop, Konrad von Th&uuml;ngen, in visitations to the monasteries and in the struggle with growing Protes
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