Sir Thomas Browne's Religio Medici (The Religion of a Doctor) was in its day a European best-seller which brought its author fame and respect throughout the continent. Because an unauthorized version of Browne's thoughts upon the Christian virtues of Faith, Hope and Charity, were mercilessly distributed and reproduced with added text, the newly-qualified physician found it necessary to publish an authorized version of his spiritual testament and psychological self-portrait in 1643.
Samuel Pepys in his diaries complained that the Religio was "cried up to the whole world for its wit and learning", and its unorthodox views placed it swiftly upon the Papal Index Librorum Prohibitorum in 1645.
Although predominantly concerning itself with Christian faith, the Religio also meanders into digressions upon alchemy, hermetic philosophy, astrology, and physiognomy. Whilst discussing Biblical scripture the learned doctor reveals a penchant for esoteric learning, confessing, for example, that "I have often admired the mystical way of Pythagoras and the secret magicke of numbers."
Browne's latitudinarian Anglicanism equally allowed him to declare: "the severe schools shall never laugh me out of the philosophy of Hermes."
A rare surviving contemporary review by a distinguished member of the Parisian medical faculty, Gui De Patin (1601/2-72) indicates the considerable impact Religio Medici had upon the intelligentsia abroad.
A translation into German of the Religio was made in 1746 and in the twentieth century the Swiss psychologist C.G.Jung used the term Religio Medici several times in his writings..
In the early nineteenth century Religio Medici was "re-discovered" by the English Romantics, firstly by Charles Lamb who introduced it to Samuel Taylor Coleridge, who after reading it exclaimed, "O to write a character of this man!"
Thomas de Quincey in his Confessions of an English Opium Eater also praised it, stating:
Though little read nowadays, in Virginia Woolf's opinion Religio Medici paved the way for all future confessionals, private memoirs and personal writings. In the seventeenth century it spawned numerous imitative titles, including John Dryden's great poem, Religio Laici, but none matched the frank, intimate tone of the original in which the learned doctor invites the reader to share with him in the labyrinthine mysteries and idiosyncratic views of his personality.
1643 books | Philosophy books | Banned books | Non-fictional British literature
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"Religio Medici".
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