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OLD HABITS DIE HARD: THE ROYAL SOCIETY, THEOPHILUS GALE AND THE INTELLECTUAL VIRTUES 1
unpublished
There were several English attempts to rethink ideas about cognition in the wake of the new attention and status given to natural philosophy in the seventeenth century. This article focuses on one of them, that of the Hebraist and ejected minister Theophilus Gale. After a brief look at some English sources for the 'intellectual virtues' of Aristotelianism, it emphasizes the strangeness of the categories of mimesis and experience in Gale's account in his work Philosophia Generalis. The
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