Community College of Denver: History
Western Civilization
What was
going on in the Renaissance? How had the
world view changed from a focus on purely spiritual matters, unrealistic
representation, to vivid, defiant realistic art?
The Italian Renaissance Humanists
The most important idea
distinguishing the Renaissance from the Middle Ages is humanism.
Textbooks will tell you that the humanists of the Renaissance rediscovered
the Latin and Greek classics (hence the "rebirth" or "renaissance" of the
classical world), that humanist philosophy stressed the dignity of
humanity, and that humanists shifted intellectual emphasis off of theology
and logic to specifically human studies. In pursuing this program, the
argument goes, the humanists literally created the European Renaissance
and paved the way for the modern, secular world.
Like all origin myths, this
account is partially true and partially false.
First, there really was no
such thing as a "humanist movement". The term "humanism" was coined in
1808 by a German educator, F. J. Niethammer, to describe a program of
study distinct from science and engineering.
In the Early Modern period,
humanism was not a philosophy but a new educational curriculum. It
was based on the revival of a course of study from classical Rome.
Defined
this way, "humanism" begins in the twelfth century (1100's) in the institution of
studia humanitatis, or "the studies of human things" in the newly
formed universities.
In the fifteenth century, the term "umanista," or
"humanist," was current and described a professional group of teachers who
taught the studia humanitatis. These "human studies" included
grammar, logic, rhetoric, geometry, arithmetic, astronomy and
music.
In antiquity, these disciplines
were called the artes liberales, or "liberal arts," for they were
the skills and knowledge necessary for a human being to be truly
free.
The Renaissance studia
humanitatis generally correspond to what we would call grammar,
rhetoric, history, literary studies and moral philosophy, though in the Middle Ages and Renaissance both history and literary studies were a part
of grammar.
|

Petrarch
|
Classical humanism begins in the
middle of the fourteenth century, when the great Florentine poet,
Francesco Petrarca, or Petrarch, begins to do systematic scholarship on
the ancient writers, especially Cicero.
It is significant to note that
with the Ottoman takeover of Byzantine Empire, large numbers of educated, wealthy Byzantines immigrated
to the Italian city-states. Some of them began to teach Greek, as well as the classics.
As a result of this scholarly
interest in the classics, the early humanists recovered the study of Greek
and Hebrew, and also began to rethink their world views and their social
organization by drawing on principles extracted from the writers of
antiquity. This was more than scholarship; the classical humanists were
engaged in syncretism - a project of mixing their present society and
world view with that of the works and thoughts of the ancient Roman and
Greek world.
In some ways, the most important
work of the Italian Renaissance, was not a sculpture or painting or
architecture, but rather an essay.
It was Giovanni Pico della Mirandola's
"Oration
on the Dignity of Man". Pico's essay forcefully shows the shift in
attention to human capacity and the human perspective.
Pico had a massive intellect and
literally studied everything there was to be studied in the university
curriculum of the Renaissance. He was a syncretist - that is, he
synthesized all that he read and tried to come up with a single world view
drawn from the whole. His essay, on the Dignity of Man, was meant
to be a preface to a massive compilation of all the intellectual
achievements of humanity, a book that never appeared because of Pico's
early death at 31.
Pico was one of the most influential
of
the Renaissance philosophers because his work synthesized all the strains
of Renaissance and late medieval thinking. These were:
humanism,
Neoplatonism, Aristotelianism, Averroism (a form of Aristotelianism), and
mysticism.
"Humanism" is not anti-Christian
as modern fundamentalists make it out to be. In fact, late medieval and
early modern humanism is just the opposite. Renaissance humanism was a
response to the standard educational program that focused on logic and
linguistics and the other great late medieval Christian philosophy,
Scholasticism.
The Humanists, rather than focusing on what they considered
futile questions of logic, semantics and proposition analysis, focused on
the relation of the human to the divine. For them human beings were the
summit and purpose of God's creation. They tried to define the human place
in God's plan and the relation of the human to the divine; therefore, they
centered all their thought on the "human" relation to the divine, and
hence called themselves "humanists." At no point do they ignore their
religion; humanism is first and foremost a religious and educational
movement, not a secular one
What we call "secular humanism"
today is a world view that arises in part from "humanism" but was
initially conceived in opposition to "humanism".
The humanists held that
religious truth was revealed to all, both Christian and non-Christian, so
part of their project was to reconcile non-Christian thinking, especially
the thought of Plato and his followers, to Christian thinking, and to
point out, through analysis of texts, the similarities between
non-Christian philosophies and religions and Christian philosophies and
religion.
The importance of Plato for Renaissance humanism cannot be over
stressed. Among other things, it gives rise to a particular species of
Renaissance magic which will, in turn, form the basis of what we call
"science" as it is invented in the early Enlightenment (late seventeenth
century).
Pico brought to this project an
immense mind, insatiable curiosity, infallible memory, and a confidence in
his intellectual capabilities that few if any have ever matched before or
since. His larger project was the synthesis of all human knowledge into a
single whole; while humanists sought to reconcile classical philosophy
with Christianity, Pico sought the reconciliation of every human
philosophy and every human religion with Christianity.
To understand Pico, his project,
and his theory of humanity, it helps to review the central philosophical
problem in the Western tradition and Christianity: the problem of the
relation of The
One and the Many. This is an old problem from the very source of
Western philosophy in Greece in the seventh century BC. Simply put, the
problem of the one and the many is this:
if the universe can be
understood as a single thing, let's say God, how do all the different
parts of the universe relate to this single
thing?
The standard Christian
position was that the many things of the universe were created by God
out of nothing ; this is called "creation ex nihilo
", or "creation out of nothing." This means that
there is no real, eternal order to creation. Since it is arbitrarily
created, it can be arbitrarily interfered with.
The Neoplatonists, on the
other hand, believed that the many things of the universe were
"emanations" from God. As a result, rather than the universe being an
arbitrary act of God, the creation of the universe is necessarily part of
the nature of God. There is an underlying logic to the created universe
that is always infallibly true. Basically, even God can not change it.
Finally, in Averroism,
which was the version of Aristotelianism that the late Middle Ages and the
Renaissance inherited from the Muslim scientist and philosopher Averro,
the question of creation is simply laid aside as irrelevant to inquiry
into the material world. Averroism tries to explain physical events by
looking at their immediate and determinate causes.
Pico tried to reconcile these
three completely opposed ways of understanding the universe in relation to
God. Pico's basic approach to the problem of the one and the many was to
argue that the many things of the universe, rather than being created by
God or emanating from God or being unrelated to God, were all
symbols of God. Everything in creation, every object, every human,
every thought, every speech, every religion, every philosophy, is an image
of God and an expression of God as the One. What unites all of creation is
this symbolic relation to God.
This is contrary to the medieval
understanding of creation—the medieval world view, following Augustine's
assertion that the world was a "region of unlikeness," believed that all
of creation was a negative symbol of God. For the medievals, humans
could never understand God because nothing on earth resembled God in any
way; the best that humans could do is understand God in a negative
sense—God is not like the things in the world.
Pico reverses this situation;
not only is the world similar to God, but everything that human beings can
think, imagine, and create are expressions of divinity. This concept was
centrally important for the development of art and literature in the High
Renaissance; the later artists of the Renaissance, including Michelangelo,
were convinced that through the operation of their own intellect and
creativity that they were giving expression to the divine or at least
expressing its likeness.
In this view, the individual human being
with her thoughts, intelligence, and imagination becomes a "small
universe," or parvus mundus. The individual human being is the
microcosm, that is, the individual human being can express the
whole of creation and can express the whole of the divine - the
macrocosm. If you want to find God then look into your own soul for
you perfectly express the whole of divinity. For this reason, Pico argues
that human beings can become any aspect of the universe whatsoever.
In traditional, neoPlatonic
Christianity, humanity occupied a middle position in the hierarchy of the
universe: as both physical and spiritual, humanity sat dead center between
the spiritual and physical worlds. Pico unhinged humanity from that
position, exalted as it might be, and claimed that human beings could
occupy any position whatsoever in the chain of being. A human being could
become as low as an animal or, though intellect and imagination, become
equivalent to God, at least in understanding.
Study
of Human Proportion
The picture above, from Leonardo
da Vinci's notebooks, is a famous study of human proportion. 
It expresses
much of what Pico is arguing about the capability of humanity to encompass
the whole of creation.
In Renaissance mathematics and in
Neo platonism, the
square in geometry represents the terrestrial world and the circle
represents the celestial world, while the triangle represents the divine
world. The circle and square in da Vinci's drawing represents more than
the mathematics of drawing a human figure, they represent how the human
being encompasses in its reach the whole of the terrestrial and celestial
worlds.
Pico locates human dignity in our capability and freedom to
be whatever we want to be. If you view the whole of human history,
according to Pico, you'll find that nothing remains stable. No faith, no
philosophy, no world view ever remains static; the only eternal thing is
the human ability and freedom to change and express ourselves in different
ways.
The greatest dignity of humanity is the boundless power of
self-transformation. The "truth" about humanity, then, can only be
found in the sum total of the works, thoughts, and faiths of humanity.
Above everything else, the greatest human capacity is to be able to
express or understand the whole of the human experience; in this light,
the principle freedom granted to humanity by God is freedom of
inquiry.
This is a radical and nearly heretical departure from
tradition. In the Christian tradition, it is accepted dogma that human
beings were created free by God and intended to be free and independent.
However, this freedom was lost when Adam and Eve sinned by disobeying God.
Pico, however, is arguing that the principle virtue of humanity is that
they are always and ever will be free to be whatever they want and express
the divine in whatever way they can. Through a torturous couple centuries,
these ideas about the nature of humanity and free inquiry would become the
basis of the modern world view.
Pico is one of the first European
thinkers to consider the hallmark of being human this capacity of "freedom." For Pico, nature and spiritual things were not free for they
could never change themselves. If something changes in nature, it's
because something else forced that change on that object. Sometimes
this is true of humans, as, for instance, when we age. However, humanity
is the only part of creation that has the freedom to will its own
changes, that is, human beings are the only part of creation that can
change themselves of their own free will.
This point of view will become
the starting point of all modern philosophies, including that of Kant,
Marx, and the existentialists.
Because of this freedom to change, Pico did
not accept the Christian view of eternal punishment or reward; if the
singular characteristic of humanity is that it can change itself, it's
impossible that it would lose that ability in the afterlife. Eternal
damnation, then, is illogical, for it argues that the human soul doesn't
have the power to reform itself even after death.
This idea of "willed change" had
a shattering influence on the arts. Not only can the arts express the
divine, they can also express this capacity of human beings to create and
transform themselves. In the later logic of the High Renaissance, art and
literature becomes an expression of the individual's free creative power
and, by extension, the free creative power of all
humanity.
It's at this point that
writers, painters, sculptors and others cease to be artisans, which is
what they were considered up until and through the Renaissance, and start
to become artists in the modern sense of the term. In this sense,
artists are artisans (painters, sculptors, etc) whose art is a
function primarily of their creativity and freedom rather than a function
of their abilities. And we begin to get the modern idea of the artist as a creative
individual, valuable for who they are through what it is they express.