Martin Schoock
Martin Schoock (1 April 1614–1669) was a Dutch academic and polymath.
Life
He was born in Utrecht. His grandfather Anton van Voorst taught him Latin. His parents were Remonstrants and intended him for the law; he studied theology and philosophy from 1632 in Leiden under Antonius Walaeus. As a student of Gisbertus Voetius he acquired a doctorate in philosophy around 1636.
About 1638 he became professor in classical literature, rhetoric and history at the
After the death of his first wife, Angelica van Merck, with whom he had seven sons and a daughter, he came into money troubles. He made a second marriage with a rich widow.
At the end of his life Schoock left Groningen. He became official historian of the
Works
Schoock published about 50 works. In the 1642–43 controversy between René Descartes and Voetius, Schoock attacked Descartes and his philosophy fiercely in his Admiranda methodus novae philosophiae Renati De Cartes; he stated later that Voetius had been a major author of the book.
He published in 1664 two works on dairy products: Tractus de Butyro (on butter), the first such publication; and Accessit ejusdem Diatriba de aversatione casei (on the dislike of cheese).
Another of his books was The Chicken and the Egg.
References
- Wiep van Bunge et al. (editors), The Dictionary of Seventeenth and Eighteenth-Century Dutch Philosophers (2003), Thoemmes Press (two volumes), article Schoock, Martin, p. 890–5.
Further reading
- Martin Schoock at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
- (in French) Theo Verbeek (1988), René Descartes et Martin Schoock: La Querelle d'Utrecht, Paris: Les impressions nouvelles.