Nicholas Hill (1570 – c. 1610) was an English natural philosopher, considered a disciple of Giordano Bruno. He is known for his 1601 book Philosophia epicurea.
John Donne satirized Hill in his Catalogus Librorum Aulicum; and he was attacked and mocked by Ben Jonson (epigram 133/134).[8][9]
Works
Philosophia epicurea, democritiana, theophrastica was a work on the classical atomism of Epicurus and skepticism.[10] It consisted of 509 aphorisms, which drew on Bruno and Lullism, Neoplatonism and Paracelsus, as well as classical authors.[1] It was published in 1601 (Paris), and in another edition in 1619 (Geneva). It included thoughts on an imaginary voyage to the Moon, a theme taken from Bruno.[11] It also shows a close relation to Bruno's De Immenso and De Minimo.[12] Other influences were Democritus, Hermes Trismegistus and William Gilbert.[13] He was a Copernican, perhaps also following Francesco Patrizi.[7] Hill, however, stops short of exploring atomism as a mechanistic philosophy.[14] Robert Kargon considers that Hill was not, in strict terms, an Epicurean, reserving to Walter Charleton the first English exposition of Epicurean thought.[15]
^Thomas C. Faulkner, Nicolas K. Kiessling, Rhonda L. Blair, J. B. Bamborough, Martin Dodsworth, The Anatomy of Melancholy by Robert Burton, Volume V Commentary (1989), p. 145.
^(in Italian) Plastina, Sandra. “NICHOLAS HILL: «THE ENGLISH CAMPANELLA»?” Bruniana & Campanelliana, vol. 4, no. 1, 1998, pp. 207–212.
Further reading
Grant McColley, Nicholas Hill and the Philosophia Epicurea, Annals of Science, Volume 4, Issue 4 October 1939, pp. 390–405
Jean Jacquot, Harriot, Hill, Warner and the new philosophy, in Thomas Harriot: Renaissance Scientist, ed. John W. Shirley (Oxford, 1974), pp. 107–28.
Stephen Clucas, 'The Infinite Variety of Formes and Magnitudes': 16th- and 17th-Century English Corpuscular Philosophy and Aristotelian Theories of Matter and Form, Early Science and Medicine, Volume 2, Number 3, 1997, pp. 251-271
Sandra Plastina, Nicholas Hill and Giordano Bruno: the new cosmology in the Philosophia Epicurea, Physis, 2001, 38: 415-432