The higher division of the seven liberal arts in the Middle Ages, composed of geometry, astronomy, arithmetic, and music.
[Late Latin, from Latin, place where four roads meet : quadri-, quadri- + via, road; see via.]
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quad·riv·i·um (kwŏ-drĭv'ē-əm) ![]() |
[Late Latin, from Latin, place where four roads meet : quadri-, quadri- + via, road; see via.]
| Classical Literature Companion: quadrivium |
quadrivium (‘meeting place of four roads’), the four mathematical disciplines of astronomy, geometry, arithmetic, and music which during the Middle Ages constituted the advanced part of the educational curriculum, known as the seven liberal arts. The trivium, the more elementary part, consisted of grammar, rhetoric, and logic. The term quadrivium seems to have been invented by Boethius.
| Philosophy Dictionary: quadrivium |
The four liberal studies following the basic trivium in the medieval university syllabus. They comprise arithmetic, music, geometry, and astronomy.
| Wikipedia: Quadrivium |
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The quadrivium comprised the four subjects, or arts, taught in medieval universities after the trivium. The word is Latin, meaning "the four ways" or "the four roads": the completion of the liberal arts. The quadrivium consisted of arithmetic, geometry, music, and astronomy. These followed the preparatory work of the trivium made up of grammar, logic (or dialectic, as it was called at the times), and rhetoric. In turn, the quadrivium was considered preparatory work for the serious study of philosophy and theology.
The quadrivium is implicit in early Pythagorean writings and in the De nuptiis of Martianus Capella, although the term was not used until Boethius early in the sixth century.[1] As Proclus wrote:
The Pythagoreans considered all mathematical science to be divided into four parts: one half they marked off as concerned with quantity, the other half with magnitude; and each or these they posited as twofold. A quantity can be considered in regard to its character by itself or in its relation to another quantity, magnitudes as either stationary or in motion. Arithmetic, then, studies quantities as such, music the relations between quantities, geometry magnitude at rest, spherics [astronomy] magnitude inherently moving[2].
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At many medieval universities, this would have been the course leading to the degree of Master of Arts (after the BA). After the MA the student could enter for Bachelor's degrees of the higher faculties, such as Music. To this day some of the postgraduate degree courses lead to the degree of Bachelor (the B.Phil and B.Litt. degrees are examples in the field of philosophy, and the B.Mus. remains a postgraduate qualification at Oxford and Cambridge universities).
The subject of music within the quadrivium was originally the classical subject of harmonics, in particular the study of the proportions between the music intervals created by the division of a monochord. A relationship to music as actually practised was not part of this study, but the framework of classical harmonics would substantially influence the content and structure of music theory as practised both in European and Islamic cultures.
In modern applications of the liberal arts as curriculum in colleges or universities, the quadrivium may be considered as the study of number and its relationship to physical space or time: arithmetic was pure number, geometry was number in space, music number in time, and astronomy number in space and time. Morris Kline classifies the four elements of the quadrivium as pure (arithmetic), stationary (geometry), moving (astronomy) and applied (music) number.[3]
This schema is sometimes referred to as classical education, but it is more accurately a development of the 12th and 13th centuries with recovered classical elements, rather than an organic growth from the educational systems of antiquity. The term continues to be used by the classical education movement.[citation needed]
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