The Counter-RenaissanceScribner, 1950 - Počet stran: 705 This stimulating reassessment of Renaissance thought produces evidence of an intellectual revolt in the sixteenth century, led by such men as Calvin, Luther, Montaigne, and Machiavelli, that ran counter to the prevailing concepts of Christian humanism and the sovereignty of reason. The author explores the influence of this challenging movement on contemporaries and on their successors, "those enigmatic and volatile individuals whom we term the Elizabethans." Writing with impeccable scholarship, leavened by a delightful literary style, Mr. Haydn has achieved a masterpiece of intellectual history. -4e de couv. |
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Strana 34
Hiram Collins Haydn. This attitude is clearly a humanistic one , in its implication that human life is worth while , possesses dignity and true significance . Yet it is not humanism in the sense of an " attitude of thought or action ...
Hiram Collins Haydn. This attitude is clearly a humanistic one , in its implication that human life is worth while , possesses dignity and true significance . Yet it is not humanism in the sense of an " attitude of thought or action ...
Strana 228
... attitude neither denies the discrepancy between the ideal and the actual , nor believes it irremediable . It at once sub- scribes to the over - all validity of what ought to be , and admits the failure of the empirical world to achieve ...
... attitude neither denies the discrepancy between the ideal and the actual , nor believes it irremediable . It at once sub- scribes to the over - all validity of what ought to be , and admits the failure of the empirical world to achieve ...
Strana 382
... attitude . With Montaigne and Machiavelli , the tendency is less complicated . Emphasizing man's origin in nature as an animal , they demonstrate the " downward " direction almost exclusively . Let us examine man , they say - whether as ...
... attitude . With Montaigne and Machiavelli , the tendency is less complicated . Emphasizing man's origin in nature as an animal , they demonstrate the " downward " direction almost exclusively . Let us examine man , they say - whether as ...
Obsah
PROLOGUE The Enigmatic Elizabethans | 1 |
2 The CounterRenaissance and the Vanity of Learning | 76 |
The CounterRenaissance and the Repeal of Universal | 131 |
Autorská práva | |
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Agrippa Aristotelian Aristotle asserts attitude Bacon Bodin Bruno Bussy century Christian humanism Christian humanists Cicero classical concept conviction Counter-Renaissance course courtly declares Discourses divine doctrine Donne doth earth edited Elizabethan emphasis empiricists Erasmus ethical experience faith Ficino fideists final God's Golden Age Hamlet hath heaven Hence Heptameron Höffding honor Hooker human Ibid idea ideal intellectual interpretation italics Jean Bodin John Donne knowledge Law of Nature Lear learning live Lovejoy Machiavelli magic man's medieval mind Montaigne Montaigne's moral Moreover naturalistic Neoplatonic Neoplatonists observation occult orthodox Paracelsus particular passage passion Phil philosophy Pico Platonic play political position Prince principle Professor Quoted Rabelais Ralegh Randall rational reason Reformation religion Renaissance Richard Hooker sance Scholastic scientific sense Shakespeare skepticism soul Spenser Stoic Stoicism Tamburlaine theology theory things Thomas Aquinas thou thought tion tradition translated true truth universe unto virtue Wulf