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  1. Giordano Bruno ( / dʒɔːrˈdɑːnoʊ ˈbruːnoʊ /; Italian: [dʒorˈdaːno ˈbruːno]; Latin: Iordanus Brunus Nolanus; born Filippo Bruno, January or February 1548 – 17 February 1600) was an Italian philosopher, poet, cosmological theorist and esotericist. [1]

  2. May 24, 2024 · Giordano Bruno (born 1548, Nola, near Naples [Italy]—died February 17, 1600, Rome) was an Italian philosopher, astronomer, mathematician, and occultist whose theories anticipated modern science.

  3. May 30, 2018 · Giordano Bruno. First published Wed May 30, 2018; substantive revision Tue Mar 12, 2024. Giordano Bruno (1548–1600) was one of the most adventurous thinkers of the Renaissance. Supremely confident in his intellectual abilities, he ridiculed Aristotelianism, especially its contemporary adherents.

  4. Giordano Bruno was an Italian philosopher of the later Renaissance whose writings encompassed the ongoing traditions, intentions, and achievements of his times and transmitted them into early modernity.

  5. Jul 3, 2019 · Giordano Bruno (1548–1600) was an Italian scientist and philosopher who espoused the Copernican idea of a heliocentric (sun-centered) universe as opposed to the church's teachings of an Earth-centered universe.

  6. Jul 23, 2015 · Who was Giordano Bruno? He is in our memory as the philosopher of astronomy. He struggled to defend the heliocentric theory to the end.

  7. Giordano Bruno of Nola near Naples in Italy (b. 1548–d. 1600) was one of the major natural philosophers of the Italian renaissance. He is also remembered for his turbulent life of exile and dissent that took him to most of the cultural centers of renaissance Europe.

  8. Giordano Bruno (1548 – February 17, 1600), born Filippo Bruno, was an Italian Dominican friar, philosopher, mathematician and astronomer.

  9. Feb 2, 2000 · It was there that the faggots were piled high for the philosopher and magician Giordano Bruno, sentenced to death as an obstinate heretic. Denied the customary mercy of strangulation, he was burned alive. Bruno’s philosophy is incomprehensible today except to specialists.

  10. Giordano Bruno, orig. Filippo Bruno, (born 1548, Nola, near Naples—died Feb. 17, 1600, Rome), Italian philosopher, astronomer, mathematician, and occultist. He entered a Dominican convent in 1565 and was ordained a priest in 1572. He abandoned the order in 1576 after being accused of heresy.