History is all encompassing. It is dynamic and not as boring as it is perceived. Nok view is here to stimulate the dissemination and knowledge of history.

EUROPE, European History

LETS GO TO EUROPE: RENAISSANCE AND ENLIGHTMENT, WHAT IS IT

LETS GO TO EUROPE: RENAISSANCE AND ENLIGHTENMENT, WHAT IS IT

To discuss this i would like to use the postulation of at least three major renaissance and enlightenment philosopher and historian.

INTRODUCTION

The Renaissance was a reaction against the dominating religion in the medieval age; it was a period of the thirteenth (13th) century to the sixteenth (16th) century while the Enlightenment was the endeavors which characterized the early Eighteenth (18th) century which could be referred to as rebirth of learning in which every aspect of human life was scrutinized. This period (Renaissance) was characterized by the revolt against the power of institutional religion; this post seeks to discuss the postulation of at least three major Renaissance and Enlightenment philosophers and historian

BASIC IDEAS AND CHARACTERISTIC OF RENAISSANCE PHILOSOPHY

To begin with the Renaissance philosophy had basic ideas and characteristics such as the view that the position of History is precarious  that is unstable, and even when several  philosophers had freed history from errors of the medieval thought such as the eschatological  view, it had still to find its own critical outlook.

More so, renaissance Humanism was a characteristic of the Renaissance philosophy, this developed in the fourteenth and fifteenth century, that is Man was the center of Discourse, it was a response to the challenge of medieval philosophy that centered everything to God ,

BASIC IDEAS AND CHARACTERISTIC OF ENLIGHTENMENT PHILOSOPHY

The Enlightenment philosophy idea was anti-clerical, against the Priest and religion, Hume and Voltaire saw religion as a thing devoid of all positive value, it was just a sheer error, due to unscrupulous and calculating hypocrisy of a class of priest, whom they seem to have thought, invented it (religion) to serve as an instrument of domination over all men. To the Renaissance philosopher’s terms like religion, priest is not historical or philosophical terms

It was Anti-Historical because the historical outlook was not genuinely historical, in its motive had no sympathy to other history because to the philosophers and historian of the Enlightenment,  the human history written before was in rational majorly because it was not like the Enlightenment historiography of scientific spirit.

The philosophical theory underlying this period or movement was that certain forms of  mental activities are primitive forms and are destined to perish when mind arrive this was seen in Vico’s work against poetry

Romanticism was a characteristic of this period, it was a movement that took place in the latter part of the eighteenth century (18th) it was a step further on individual experience as well as the human brain, it related to feelings and personal thought in which sympathy, positive values and interest in civilization other than theirs as philosophers were examined the father of this was Jean Jacque Rousseau.

The Enlightenment philosophy was characterized by propaganda, reason, rationality and empiricism

DIFFERENCE BETWEEN RENAISSANCE AND ENLIGHTENMENT PHILOSOPHY

Renaissance philosophy is associated with humanism while Enlightenment is associated with the Scientific method and Rationalism

Enlightenment through Romanticism, Humanism through Renaissance

PHILOSOPHER OF THE RENAISSANCE PERIOD: NICCOLO MACHIAVELLI AND HIS CONTRIBUTION TO HISTORIOGRAPHY

Niccolo Machiavelli was born on May 1469 and died June 1527, in later part of his years, he studied classics and   history and was guided by strictly utilitarian choices of means to the end,he was against religious dogma or moral precepts. His chief works were The Prince (1513), Discourse of Livy(1515-1517),The History Of Florence(1520-1525)etc

Niccolo Machiavelli work was particularistic in nature and was attached to providence, for example his work the history of Florence was particular about Florence and was contrary to universalism.

Niccolo Machiavelli also contributed to the discourse that man is the center of discourse and that the center point of history is affected by man, this could be seen in his work the prince whereby “the end justifies the means; man is the architect of his own destiny.

Furthermore, Niccolo Machiavelli emphasized on the good scrutiny of sources and this could be said to be a contribution to historiography, this could be found in his work is 220px-Portrait_of_Niccolò_Machiavelli_by_Santi_di_Tito.jpg

PHILOSOPHER OF THE ENLIGHTENMENT PERIOD: HUME AND VOLTAIRE AND THEIR CONTRIBUTION TO HISTORIOGRAPHY

HUME: 

Hume was named David Home which he changed to Hume, he was born on the 7th of May 1711 and died 25th of August 1776, he was a Scottish philosopher historian, economists etc, he was known for his empiricism and skepticism and his chief works were Treaties of Human Nature, Moral and Essays and Political in1744, The History of England, etc.

Also, Hume saw religion as sheer error in his work on superstition and enthusiasm, and in his own opinion he attacked the spiritual substance and became the forerunner of scientific history because it destroyed the last vestage of substancialism.

Furthermore, Hume contributed to historiography through his work the history of England; this work widened the focus of history during this period away from merely kings, parliaments and armies to literature and science.

Additionally, Hume in his philosophical writings, attempted to demonstrate how ordinary preposition about object, casual relations, the self are semantically equivalent to propositions about ones experiences and thus Hume was a fore runner of the logical positivist movement

VOLTAIRE:

Voltaire was a pen name of Francois Marie Arouet, he was born in 1694 in Paris, France and died 83 years later in France on May1778, he wrote numerous philosophical work, history work etc. and he is considered one of the greatest name in the French Enlightenment example of his works are The age of Louis XIV (1751) and Essay on the customs and spirit of the Nations (1756), Treaties on Toleration (1763)

Voltaire’s writing in history challenged the common conception at that time that historiography dealt with the political with big political, military and diplomatic event, he instead emphasized in the cultural history, science.

More so, he is known to try and write a history based on cultural and economical facts rejecting any kind of theological framework.eg the age of Louis XIV (1751) and Essay on the customs and spirit of the Nations (1756) which helped to deviate historiography from the narrative deeds performed by Great men of war and of Eurocentrism.

Voiltare was a fierce critique of Religious tradition and he reasoned that the existence of God was a question of Reason and observation rather than faith, in his words, “it is perfectly evident to my mind that there exists a necessary eternal, supreme and intelligent being, there is no matter of faith but of reason.

CRITICS OF THE PHILOSOPHERS POSTULATION

Critics of Humes work in Great Britain as an abstract and unintelligible, Roth argues that Humes work display his biases against  Presbyterians and puritans and says the pro-monarchy position  diminished the influence of his work  and that his emphases on politics and religion  led to the neglect of a social and economic  history.

CONCLUSION

To conclude, with Enlightenment and Renaissance represented an advancement in some areas as humanism, Romanticism and a reversal in some areas it had substancialism and philosopher such as Hume and Voltaire did very little to improve historical research.

REFERENCE

  • Ardal Pall,Passion an Value in Hume’s Treaties, Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press,1966.
  • Campbell Mossner, The Life of David Hume, Oxford University Press, 1980.
  • Davidson Ian,Voiltaire:A life,profile books,London
  • Gaskin J.C, Hume’s Philosophy, New York an Oxford, Oxford University Press 1978
  • Gatti H.ed,Glordano Bruro, Philosophy of the Renaissance, Aldershot, Ashgate, 2002
  • Kraye,J,Classical Traditions in Renaissance Philosophy, , Aldershot, Ashgate, 2002
  • H.Walsh, An Introduction To Philosophy of History, New Jersey, Humanities Press, 1947
  • G Collinwood, Idea of History

4 Comments

  1. Please, accept my modest opinion on Humanism and Renaissance.
    Renaissance, as the name means, is a renaissance of studies and a renewed interest in the Classical Greek Philosophy. It is not a reaction, but a rediscovery of Classics, after almost one thousand years (called Dark Centuries), in which men studied only Bible and theological treaties.

    After the fall of Roman Empire (479 AD) all the social, economic and political activities disappeared. Europe was almost deserted. People murdered by civil wars and the missing of one egemonic politic. Only the Christian Religion survived and, in the secret walls of monasteries, monks dedicated their activity to rewrite old classical books. But these books were not published, first because very few people could read and write, second because Classical Greek Philosphers did not agree with Christian Dogma developed during the centuries.

    Only one argument was common between Christianity and latest Greek Philosophy: the interest to man and his intellectual activity as it was the main vehicle to know the existence of God and to recognize that man is a God’s opera. Humanism (1400 AD), the philosohical thought it preceded the Renaissance (1500 AD), is simply the activity to put the man at the centre of the philosophical and theological speculation. Discussions over man and his intellect now go out of monasteries and start to be developed in the Universities, and these discussions start to have a “civil” accent rather than the only “religious” accent like it had been till now.

    The renewed interest to man and his intellect, did the opportunity to recognize that human events are the consequence of a human reason and not only the developing of an obscure divine project, known only by God. So we surprisingly find a man like Niccolo’ Machiavelli who says: “the end justifies the means; man is the architect of his own destiny”. It was the rediscovery of human passions and human egoism as vehicles to the history progression.

    Humanism and Renaissance contributed to put the man again in this Earth, leaving the abstract speculations over life after death; or speculations over how to build the “City of God” (De Civitate Dei) by Saint Augustinus. Man had to live in this Earth. So during Humanism and Renaissance we have the rediscovery of human feelings, human love. And we find a Prince of Florence, Lorenzo De Medici, surprisingly exclaming in the 1400 AD:

    “How is beatiful the youth!
    Although it is running away so far!
    Let it be happy who wants it to be.
    Because of tomorrow there is no certainty!”

    It means: live your life intensely and without worries. Make it today, because tomorrow you could be dead. So it was the rediscovery of human feelings and all that is pertinent to the terrestrian life.

    The renewed studies on Greek Classics: Platonism, Neoplatonism, Aristotelism, contributed to the renaissance of interest in magic arts, and did help to recognize that there are some influences between Earth, Moon, Planets. There is a new interest over Astronomy and over Astrology, and Magic Arts, and Alchemy. These studies were condamned by official Church, but not abhored in the high circles of high intellectual people. So we find the Prince of Florence Cosimo de Medici who gives a tutor priest to his nephew Lorenzo De Medici. The tutor’s name is Marsilio Ficino. Marsilio was not only a priest, but also a doctor, expert in medicaments using draughts, and a big expert of Greek Classics, translator of Neoplatonism Operas from Greek to Latin (latin was the official language used by intellectuals in that time). He was also an expert of some arab operas, like “Picatrix”, a manual on how to know the influences of planets on human people. So, rediscovering Astrology, there was the intuition that not all is coming from God, but Moon, Planets and Universe, exercize an influence over mankind. Learning about those influences you can learn about human activity. Man, with Marsilio Ficino, returns in his place on Earth, he is no more a God’s creature, but Earth, mankind, Moon, Planets and Universe are all creatures of God and all contribute to the God’s Glory. Knowing the influences of Universe on mankind you can contribute to discover God. This was substancially what Marsilio Ficino told to us.

    What about, after my endless comment?

    Simply what I already explained. Humanism and Renaissance were a rediscovery of man, with his egoism, his brutality, but also with his feeling, with his love. Man’ soul reveals a Universe as the Universe reveals human soul. Man must live on Earth, because on the Earth he was placed by God. God gave to man the intellect to recognize God into himself, and out of himself, in the Universe. The Universe exercizes influences to mankind. Studying and learnig about these influences, man can contribute to help God in the Creation Opera that is continuous. Man and Universe are part of a unique Creation, and man has to live his life in this Earth.

  2. Comment by post author

    Definitely, thank you. I would love some suggestions on what you would like to read about my country.

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