Ulster of Strasbourg


Ulrich of Strasbourg (born 1225 in Strasbourg - died 1277) - German Dominican, philosopher and theologian.

He was a pupil and listener of Albert the Great, who taught philosophical lectures in Cologne (1248 - 1252). Together with Ulric their listener was also Thomas Aquinas. The young Dominican from Strasbourg, fascinated by the chapter of De divinis nominibus, discussed by master Albert IV, began his work on his most famous and probably only work - Liber de summo bono (1265-1272).

It presents a new aesthetic concept based on concepts of form, light and proportion. In addition, he developed a cascading of proportions, much more accurate than that of Thomas Aquinas. In Liber de ... Ulryk also took up the concept of form and beauty. The first concept is colored neoplatonism and devoid of concreteness. And the second is exactly in the form of splendor formae, but this form possesses all the features of neoplatonic light, and the image of visible reality is influenced by De causis.

The Strasbourg Ulster never gave up his work. He died five years after completing his life - in 1277. Bibliography

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