Jungius was an important figure of 17th century
atomism, and was an advocate of a "
corpuscular chemistry" that assumed the
conservation of mass. He also demonstrated that a
catenary was not a
parabola. In 1638 he published the textbook
Logica Hamburgensis, which presented late
medieval theories and techniques of
logic. Here he demonstrated oblique cases of arguments that did not adhere to simpler forms of
inference; An example being: "The square of an even number is even; 6 is even; therefore, the square of 6 is even". His double position as connected to scholastic logic, but also to innovations, earns him the classification semi-
Ramist.
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz wrote, :"While Jungius of Lübeck is a man little known even in Germany itself, he was clearly of such judiciousness and such capacity of mind that I know of no other mortal, including even
Descartes himself, from whom we could better have expected a great restoration of the sciences, had Jungius been either known or assisted." Jung was a man of great intellect, he defined a plant as: "A plant is a living non-sentient body, attached to a particular place or habitat, where it is able to feed, to grow in size, and finally to propagate itself." == Bibliography ==