Moisiodax

Moisiodax

Iosipos (Joseph) Moisiodax or Moesiodax (1725 - 1800) was a philosopher, professor and director of the Princely Academy from Iaşi, one of the greatest exponents of the Neohellenic and Romanian Enlightenment.

Biography

Moisiodax was born in the town of Cernavodă from Dobrudja, in a family of unknown origin (he was probably Romanian or Aromanian by birth, maybe Bulgarian, certainly not Greek). His real name is unknown, "Joseph" being his monk name and "Moisodax"/"Moesiodax" meaning "Dacian from Moesia", i.e. "the Dobrudjan". Assimilating the Greek-language culture, Moisiodax considered himself Greek and was a Greek patriot. His patriotism was not nationalist, but cultural, since being Greek was for him a question of language, religion and culture. Thus, every Greek-speaking Orthodox was Greek by these criteria.

Moisiodax went to the Greek schools from Thessaloniki and Smyrna. Probably in this period he became a monk. After 1753 he went for several years to the Athonite Academy, which was back then under the direction of Eugenios Voulgaris, another prominent exponent of the Neohellenic Enlightenment. Between 1756 - 1760 Moisiodax studied at the University of Padua, under Giovanni Poleni.

In 1765, during the reign of Grigore III Ghica, Moisiodax came to Moldavia where he became the Director of the Princely Academy from Iaşi, and its professor of philosophy. In 1766, becoming sick, possibly of tuberculosis, he retired from this professorship and went to Walachia, where he passed the next 10 years. Having recovered from his illness, he returns to Iaşi, where he will accept for the second time the direction of the Academy. After only seveal months, he is forced to resign again, due to the boyars 'opposition to his way of teaching. He goes first to Braşov(1777), and after that to Wien, where he published his most important work, "The Apology". In 1797 he is briefly a professor at the Princely Academy from Bucharest. He dies in Bucharest, in 1800.

elected bibliography

*"Ethical Philosophy", translation of Lodovico Muratori's "Filosofia Morale", Venice, 1761, 2 vol.
*"Treatise on the Education of the Youth", adaptation after Locke and Fénelon with several original chapters, Venice, 1779
*"The Apology", Wien, 1780

This book is remarkable in many respects. Among other things, it is the first essay of Neohellenic literature. But its greatest importance resides in the concept of "sound philosophy" proposed there. This philosophy is the Occidental natural philosophy, as oppposed to the Corydalean Neo-Aristotelianism that was taught everywhere in the Greek-speaking world. Moisiodax admired Descartes, Galilei, Wolff, Locke, but most of all he admired Newton. He thought that philosophical instruction must begin with the study of mathematics, and that good philosophy is mathematical philosophy. Also, Moisiodax banned the Aristotelian logic from the academic curricula, replacing it with the theory of knowledge, and proposed that the Ancient Greek be replaced in classrooms by Modern Greek, in order to increase the clarity of the lessons taught.

*"The Theory of Geography", Wien, 1781 (wrote in 1767)
*"Notes of Physics", Bucharest, 1784


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно сделать НИР?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Iosipos Moisiodax — Iosipos (Joseph) Moisiodax or Moesiodax (Greek: Ιώσηπος Μοισιόδαξ, 1725–1800) was an 18th century philosopher and professor and one of the greatest exponents of the modern Greek Enlightenment. He also became director of the Princely Academy of… …   Wikipedia

  • Мисиодакс, Иосипос — Иосипос Мисиодакс греч. Ιώσηπος Μοισιόδακας Род деятельности: философ Дата рождения …   Википедия

  • List of Aromanians — This is a list in progress of world famous or important Aromanians and people having Aromanian ancestry.Art*Camil Ressu, Romanian painter *Manakis brothers (Yanaki and Milton Manakia), film and photography; pioneers in the Balkans, from Avdela,… …   Wikipedia

  • Adamantios Korais — (1748 1833). Adamantios Korais or Coraïs (Greek: Αδαμάντιος Κοραής) (27 April 1748 – 6 April 1833) was a humanist scholar credited with laying the foundations of Modern Greek literature and a major figure in the Greek Enlightenment. His… …   Wikipedia

  • Rigas Feraios — Rigas Ρήγας Φεραίος Rigas Born Antonios Kyriazis 1757 Velestino (now Rigas Feraios (municipality)), Thessaly, Greece (then in the Ottoman Empire) …   Wikipedia

  • Theophilos Kairis — Theóphilos Kaíris Theophilos Kairis (or Kaires; 19 October 1784 – 13 January 1853, Greek: Θεόφιλος Καΐρης; baptismal name Θωμᾶς, Thomas) was a Greek priest and revolutionary. He was born in Andros, Cyclades, Ottoman Greece, as a son of a… …   Wikipedia

  • Romanian philosophy — is a name covering either a) the philosophy done in Romania or by Romanians, or b) an ethnic philosophy, which expresses at a high level the fundamental features of the Romanian spirituality, or which elevates to a philosophical level the… …   Wikipedia

  • Greek language question — The Greek language question ( el. γλωσσικό ζήτημα, short: το γλωσσικό) was a dispute discussing the question whether the language of the Greek people (Dimotiki) or an archaic imitation of Ancient Greek (Katharevousa) should be the official… …   Wikipedia

  • Princely Academy from Iaşi — The Princely Academy from Iaşi was an institution of higher learning, active in the 18th and 19th centuries. History Founded by the Prince Antioh Cantemir in 1707, the Academy symbolically continued the Vasilian College, although no direct link… …   Wikipedia

  • Demotizismus — Unter Dimotiki (griechisch δημοτική [γλώσσα], „Volkssprache“) versteht man die historisch gewachsene und in direkter Kontinuität aus dem Altgriechischen entstandene neugriechische Volkssprache. Der Begriff als solcher ist seit 1818 belegt.[1] Die …   Deutsch Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”