Juan Huarte

Juan Huarte de San Juan or Juan Huarte there Navarro , doctor and Spanish philosopher, born towards 1530 with Saint-Jean-Foot-of-Port in the Low-Navarre , died in 1588 with Linares.

He is educated at the university of Huesca, where he is graduate in medicine.

Although it is doubtful that it exerted medicine with Huesca, he is characterized by his professionalism and his heroic zeal with Baeza in 1566. He exerted medicine with Madrid.

Its Examen of ingenios tired para ciencias (1573) brings a reputation in whole Europe to him. It is the first treaty to show the relation between the Psychologie and the Physiologie, and is remarkable by its ingeniousness and its accuracy of sight. It indicates to it to which signs one can recognize the natural provisions, but the Dictionnaire Bouillet indicates to it to the 19th century that one finds there ideas odd on the means of procreating the sexes at will and to give birth to from great talents .

Huarte publishes the first edition of sound Examen of ingenios tired para ciencias with Pampelune in 1575. In 1594, after its death, one second version, revised and expurgée by the Inquisition was published.

This work often will be reprinted, translated into French by Gabriel Chappuys, Lyon, 1580, by Charles de Vion d' Alibray, 1645, and François-Savinien d' Alquié, 1672).

This writing was refuted by the Jordan Guibelet, Paris, 1631.

A new French edition of the Examination of the spirits for sciences , translated by Jean-Baptiste Etcharren and presented by Ricardo Saez, was published in 2000. ISBN 2-84394-170-9

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