Centre for the Study of Medicine and the Body in the Renaissance explained

Centre for the Study of Medicine and the Body in the Renaissance (CSMBR)
Type:International Research Centre
Parent:Institutio Santoriana - Fondazione Comel
Affiliation:University of Exeter, Yale University, University of Würzburg, University of Parma, Studio Firmano
Other Name:CSMBR
Motto:'Florescat Flos Sapientiae'
Established:2018
Address:Via Cardinale Pietro Maffi, 48
Postalcode:56126
Country:Italy
Website:https://csmbr.fondazionecomel.org/

The Centre for the Study of Medicine and the Body in the Renaissance (CSMBR) is an international institute of advanced studies in the history of medicine and science based at the Domus Comeliana in Pisa.[1] The centre is the major Italian institution devoted to the medical humanities.

History

The CSMBR was established in January 2018 after the endowment of the Institutio Santoriana – Fondazione Comel to carry on the scientific legacy of the Italian physician, scientist, inventor and philosopher Santorio Santori (1561-1636), who introduced the quantitative method to medicine and is reputed the father of quantitative experimental physiology,[2] [3] [4] pursuant to the will of Prof. Marcello Comel (1902–1996)[5] [6] [7] founder of the institution.

Location

The premises of the CSMBR are in the Domus Comeliana, former private residence of Marcello Comel, located next to the Leaning Tower in Piazza dei Miracoli.

Organisation

The CSMBR is run by a committee of scholars[8] that works globally in cooperation with Universities and Research Institutes across the EU, the UK, and the US, namely:

The founder and current Director of the CSMBR is the intellectual historian Fabrizio Bigotti while the President is the historian of medicine Vivian Nutton.

Mission

The core mission of the CSMBR is to further the values of humanism and the advancement of scientific knowledge as inspired by the intellectual, cultural, and social development of the European Medical Renaissance (1300–1700).

Fundamental Principles

The CSMBR community takes inspiration from the principles of Renaissance Humanism, meant as the commitment to acknowledging, respecting, and developing the human potential proper to each individual. In accordance with these principles, central to the CSMBR academic practice is the recovery and revival of classical tradition while the scholarly work at large is intended to allow each individual to form their own opinion, as freely and independently as possible. As a result, the CSMBR neither seeks nor promotes any direct political goal, being constituted as an independent research institute, open to scholars of any nationality, without discrimination of ethnicity, gender, age, political, religious, or sexual orientation.

Prizes and Publications

The Centre provides awards and travel grants, such as the Santorio Award for Excellence in Research,[9] the Santorio Fellowship for Medical Humanities and Science,[10] while encouraging international cooperation through the VivaMente Conference in the History of Ideas.[11]

In partnership with Palgrave-MacMillan (Springer) the CSMBR sponsors the series Palgrave Studies in Medieval and Early Modern Medicine (PSMEMM) The series focuses on the intellectual tradition of western medicine as related to the philosophies, institutions, practices, and technologies that developed throughout the medieval and early modern period (500-1800). It seeks to explore the range of interactions between various conceptualisations of the body, including their import for the arts (e.g. literature, painting, music, dance, and architecture) and the way different medical traditions overlapped and borrowed from each other. The series hosts contributions Santorio Awardees and is particularly keen on contributions coming from young authors.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Amiri. Peyman. The Kiln, the Alembic, and the Clockwork: Inside the CSMBR Summer School Premodern Healthscaping. 2019-09-29. en-US.
  2. Eknoyan. G.. 1999. Santorio Sanctorius (1561-1636) - founding father of metabolic balance studies. American Journal of Nephrology. 19. 2. 226–233. 10.1159/000013455. 0250-8095. 10213823. 32900603.
  3. Bigotti. Fabrizio. February 2017. A Previously Unknown Path to Corpuscularism in the Seventeenth Century: Santorio's Marginalia to the Commentaria in Primam Fen Primi Libri Canonis Avicennae (1625). Ambix. 64. 1. 29–42. 10.1080/00026980.2017.1287550. 1745-8234. 5470109. 28350287.
  4. Bigotti. Fabrizio. Taylor. David. 2017. The Pulsilogium of Santorio: New Light on Technology and Measurement in Early Modern Medicine. Societate Si Politica. 11. 2. 53–113. 2067-7812. 6407692. 30854144.
  5. Web site: The founder. Fondazione Comel. 2019-06-03.
  6. Web site: SIUSA Archivi di personalità - Comèl (Comel) Marcello. siusa.archivi.beniculturali.it. 2019-06-03.
  7. Book: Comèl, Marcello. L'uomo nel suo ambiente: fisiologia ambientale, ecofisiologia e fisiecologia. 1981. Domus. it.
  8. Web site: Scientific Committee. CSMBR - Fondazione Comel. it-IT. 2019-06-04.
  9. Web site: Santorio Award History of Science Society. 2019-06-04.
  10. Web site: 2018-04-13. SANTORIO FELLOWSHIP FOR MEDICAL HUMANITIES AND SCIENCE 2018 Conecta. 2019-06-04. SANTORIO FELLOWSHIP FOR MEDICAL HUMANITIES AND SCIENCE 2018 Conecta.
  11. Web site: VivaMente. 2020-07-30. CSMBR - Fondazione Comel. it-IT. 2020-09-30. https://web.archive.org/web/20200930043921/https://csmbr.fondazionecomel.org/vivamente/. dead.