Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Humanism
- Sources
- Burke
- "an interest in Latin and Greek Literature"
- Holmes
- "learning ... values of ancient Greece and Rome"
- Dickens
- "creative study of Greek and Roman civilisation"
- Greenblatt
- "The Rome of the forum and the Senate House"
- "Latin language whose crystalline beauty
filled him with wonder" [Poggio - scholar]
- Cicero, Orations
- "The best Orator"
- "To teach them is his duty, to delight
them is creditable to him, to move
them is indispensable"
- Vitruvius
- "Ingenious and apt in the
acquisition of knowledge"
- Aristotle
- "entertain a thought
without accepting it"
- "the aim of art is to represent
... inward significance"
- "the will of the
majority is supreme"
- "In a democracy the
poor will have more
power than the rich"
- Plato
- "Ship of state"
- Lucretius
- "Blissful"
- "competing for intellectual eminence,
disputing about rank"
- The belief that man is God's
greatest creation
- The importance of humankind
- Recovery of Ancient texts/ideas
- Search for the 'Truth'
- Church copies inaccurate (Christian-ised)
- Looking for faithful texts
- Intellectual persuit
- Underpins the Renaissance world
- First Phase
- Roman/Latin Phase
- Vitruvious
- Architecture
- Transform the visual
nature of the Renaissance
- Classical style
- Ancient view of democracy
- Everybody knows their place
- Cicero
- Most of his work was lost, but a lot
of what was left was recovered
- A lot of his work was about
how to live successfully in
the public eye
- How to conduct oneself
- Publicity was important in the ancient world
- Writer/Orator
- His Latin was considered the 'best' .. not christianised
- Corrupted language led to a
corrupted/unclear message
- Understanding his original
work as it was written NOT
how it was copied
- Second Phase
- Greek
- Many didn't know the language of ancient Greece
- 1453 Greeks fled Constantinople
- Aristotle
- Led the impression of democracy
- People harnessed the image of his ideas
- Debate
- The will of the people
- Art should convey a message
- Plato
- Everybody had their place in society
- Orders of society
- Philosopher King
- Auxillaries
- Merchants/Workers
- Tri-partite division
of the soul
- Reason
- Emotion
- Desire
- Epicureanism
- Pursuant of pleasure
- Roman Catholic Church's view
- Dangerous
- Pursuit of pleasure = lustful
- Pursuit of Sin
- Was actually the pursuit of simple pleasures
- 'True' pleasure was being with those you love
- Pleasure comes with not concerning yourself
with common ideas of pleasure
- 'Usual' pleasures were empty - a waster of time
- Believed to be the pursuit of base pleasures