Слайд 2Ethics of Renaissance
Birth of humanism
A greatness of a human being
Ethics of middle
ages is reviewed
Do not obey, but be virtues
Ancient values: power and cult of body
Equality of people
How Christian values can be exercised in reality? (N. Machiavelli)
A certain crisis of religion
Слайд 3Ethics of Renaissance: humanism
Even is the masters used the Biblical motives, they
put a human nature in it.
Art: human flesh captured attention, even in Biblical paintings.
Yet, humanism has paradoxical features: triumph and illusion at once.
Humanism worships a godless human mind: science, empirics, intellect.
Слайд 4HUMANISM AND RENAISSANCE: Biblical motives
Слайд 5HUMANISM AND RENAISSANCE: an interest to a human being
Слайд 6HUMANISM AND RENAISSANCE: new culture
Back to the classics
Renaissance XV-XVI century (Leonardo, Michelangelo)
A new birth of culture and arts (after Medieval Times)
Слайд 7Giordano Bruno – burned alive Thomas More – decapitated
Слайд 8HUMANISM AND RENAISSANCE
A direct relationship with the classics (in polemics with Medieval
interpretations)
The centrality of Man though God is still fundamental
A new interest in the study of nature
The relationship between morality and politics (Machiavelli, Bodin)
Слайд 9HUMANISM AND RENAISSANCE: science
From a closed world to the infinite space:
Copernicus (1543) the Hearth is rotating around the Sun, Bacon (1561-1626) and the concept of experiment, Galilei (1564-1642) the telescope and the infinite universe.
But also the Inquisition
Слайд 10Protestant reform: a crisis of church
(Luther, Calvin)
Слайд 11MARTIN LUTHER AND THE PROTESTANT REFORM
1517 Luther posted a sheet of theses
for discussion on the University’s chapel door ? Ninety-Five Theses
A devastating critique of the church’s sale of indulgences
Слайд 12ERASMUS MUNDUS (1469-1536)
Positive: Folly is necessary for human life: it generates friendships,
combines weddings, give birth ? men are moved by passions more than rational reasoning
Negative: the folly of conventions and appearances (social role) VS the salvation of the soul
Positive: the highest level of folly ? belief and faith
Слайд 13Thomas More (1478-1535)
1529 Chancellor of England
1535 Decapitated because he refused to recognize
the divorce between Henry VIII and Catherina of Aragon and the “act of supremacy” declaring the King as the head of the English Church;
“UTOPIA”: a place where everyone is happy