Posts Tagged ‘Athanasius Kircher of Fulda’

Review: A Man of Misconceptions: The Life of an Eccentric in an Age of Change

By Colby Cosh - Friday, December 7, 2012 - 0 Comments

Athanasius Kircher of Fulda (c. 1601-1680) occupies a strange niche in intellectual history. Kircher, a German Jesuit who founded a museum of curiosities and wonders in Rome, pops up in the early, confused history of dozens of scientific disciplines, from acoustics to geology to sinology. He was one of the most famous and prolific scholars in Europe, yet his library-filling oeuvre has left no trace of value. He has recently become a favourite among students of early-modern weirdness, evolving from being forgotten to being remembered for being forgotten.

John Glassie’s affectionate portrait accounts for much about this man’s evaporating importance. Father Kircher was wrong about most everything he turned his mind to, and when he was right it was mostly dumb luck. As a student of Egyptian hieroglyphics, for example, he had the good sense to suspect that the contemporary Coptic language of Egypt might provide clues to the lingo of Pharaonic Egypt. But while this hint would be used in the 19th century to help crack hieroglyphics, Kircher squandered it, improvising hundreds of pages of worthless but attention-grabbing “translations.” Continue…

From Macleans