Gilbertus Jacchaeus (Leiden, 1614)

Gilbert Jack (Latinized as Gilbertus Jacch(a)eus; c. 1578 – April 17, 1628) was Scottish Ramist[1] philosopher and physician.

Life

He was born in Aberdeen, and studied at Marischal College under Robert Howie. In 1598 he went to the University of Helmstedt.[2][3]

He was professor, later of physics, at the University of Leiden, from 1605.[4] He was dismissed in 1619, suspected of sympathy with the Remonstrants;[5] he was reinstated in 1623.[2]

In 1626 he held the funeral oration for his deceased colleague Willebrord Snellius.

He died in Leiden.

His students included Franck Burgersdijk and Adolph Vorstius.[6]

Works

  • Institutiones Physicae (1614)
  • Primae Philosophiae Institutiones (1616)
  • Institutiones Medicae (1624)

The Institutiones Physicae is in nine books, and accepts the occult influence of the heavens.[7]

Notes

  1. Sarah Hutton, British Philosophy in the Seventeenth Century, Oxford University Press, 2015, p. 87.
  2. 1 2 Andrew Pyle (editor), Dictionary of Seventeenth Century British Philosophers (2000), article Jack, Gilbert, pp. 463–466.
  3. "Professors of physics in Leiden (1582-1950)".
  4. Nicholas Thompson, The Long Reach of Reformation Irenicism: the Considerationes Modestae et Pacificae of William Forbes (1585–1634), p. 10
  5. Gilbert Jack at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  6. Lynn Thorndike, History of Magic and Experimental Science, vol. 12 (1923) p. 390.
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