Olaf Pedersen

Not to be confused with Olaf Petersen.
For the Danish gymnast, see Olaf Pedersen (gymnast).

Olaf Pedersen (1920–1997) was a "leading authority on astronomy in classical antiquity and the Latin middle ages"[1]

Olaf Pedersen was born April 8, 1920 in Egtved, Jutland, Denmark. At the University of Copenhagen he studied in Niels Bohr’s institute, graduating in 1943 when the country was occupied by German forces. He began his teaching career in Randers, Jutland, teaching physics. He entered scholarship studying the philosophy and history of ideas. After the war he studied with Etienne Gilson in Paris. Returning to Denmark, he obtained a doctorate for work on Nicole Oresme in 1956, when he became a lecturer at Aarhus University.

In 1965 a department for history of science was formed at Aarhus. "The staff of the department, including Pedersen, taught science as well as history of science, and though this diluted their research it kept them in contact with science and maintained their bona fides among science colleagues."[1] In 1967 Pedersen became a professor in this department. He published two books in 1974: A Survey of the Almagest and Early Physics and Astronomy. The latter publication "supplied the needs of a generation of students in the infant discipline of the history of science."[1]

Pedersen was active in other organizations: the journal Centaurus, the Steno Museum, the International Union of History and Philosophy of Science, and the International Academy of the History of Science.

In 1997 Pedersen published The First Universities[2] which received several scholarly reviews. Ruth Karras wrote, "this book begins, not as a history of universities, but as a history of learning."[3] Her opinion was that a "more balanced view for both medievalists and non-specialists" was provided by volume one of A History of the University in Europe (1992), edited by Hilde Ridder-Symoens. A more favorable review was given by DR Jones: [Pedersen] "develops a complex explanation of the nature of the university, if not a theory of causation. His first universities are shaped by interweaving requirements of subject matter, teaching methods, legal and organizational means, and requirements of society and state."[4] A balanced review was given by HEJ Cowdrey: "Perhaps the most valuable chapters of the book are those which concern the classical inheritance of medieval higher education and the transition from ancient science to monistic learning." On the other hand, Cowdrey notes a "disconcerting number of factual errors", "too much attention is given to relatively unimportant topics", and "very little account indeed has been taken of scholarly work published since the early 1970s."[5] Marcia L. Colish described the book[6] as "a superficial and shaky sketch of what universities actually taught. He emphasizes the organization, not the content of education." Colish finds Pedersen prone to "repeat and compound factual errors more recently given the descent burial they deserve." She suggests other, more reliable, authorities. On the other hand, Ian P. Wei gave[7] the book an enthusiastic review, calling it a "clear and lively work of synthesis." He wrote that the "main thrust of the book is to present medieval universities as institutions which can only be understood in relation to broader political and social developments. Particular emphasis is laid on the significance of the struggles between popes and emperors, and on Roman law. The book’s greatest strength is its extraordinary breadth of vision."

After an operation on his heart, Olaf Pedersen died December 3, 1997.

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 Michael Hoskin (October 1998) Obituary: Olaf Pedersen Astronomy and Geophysics 39(5):33,4
  2. O. Pedersen (1997) The First Universities: Studium Generale and the Origins of University Education in Europe, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 9780521594318
  3. Ruth Mosso Karras (2002) Speculum 77(1):2345
  4. David R. Jones (1999) History of Education Quarterly 39(3):3635
  5. H.E.J. Cowdrey (1998) Oxford Review of Education 24(4):5258
  6. Marcia L. Colish (1999) Journal of Ecclesiastical History 50(2):350
  7. Ian P. Wei (2000) History 85:115

Further reading

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