Libert Froidmont | |
Birth Date: | 1587 9, df=yes |
Birth Place: | Haccourt, Prince-bishopric of Liège, Holy Roman Empire |
Death Place: | Leuven, Duchy of Brabant, Spanish Netherlands |
Other Names: | Libertus Fromondus |
Alma Mater: | Louvain University |
Discipline: | Natural philosophy |
Workplaces: | Louvain University |
Notable Works: | Meteorologicorum libri sex (Antwerp, Plantin Press, 1627) |
Libert Froidmont (Latin: Libertus Fromondus; 3 September 1587, in Haccourt-Liège – 28 October 1653, in Louvain) a son of Gerard Libert de Froidmont and Marguerite Radoux, was a Liégeois theologian and scientist. He was a close companion to Cornelius Jansen and corresponded with René Descartes.
Froidmont was educated by the Jesuits in his native Haccourt, near Liège, and studied philosophy in Louvain at the Falcon college. He became friends with Jansenius but did not pursue his studies and instead went to teach first at Antwerp and later back at Louvain. As a young professor there he was excited about Galileo's discoveries and introduced them to his students.[1]
His scientific interests led him to publish on physics and mathematics.
Acknowledging him as an authority on meteors, Descartes sent him his Discourse on the Method, which Froidmont received rather critically. The scientific revolution may have been underway but Froidmont, who was well informed on many scientific matters, kept a traditionalist Aristotelian view. Nevertheless, he sought to co-opt rather than reject new approaches.[2]
While teaching philosophy he also started studying theology and obtained a doctorate in 1628. Meanwhile, he had become close to Jansenius who entrusted him with the posthumous publication of the Augustinus. Froidmont succeeded him in the chair of Scripture at Louvain.