Renaissance Man

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Routledge, 2015 M07 3 - 496 pages

Considering such witnesses of the time as Shakespeare, Dante, Petrarch, Michelangelo, Machiavelli, Montaigne, More and Bacon, Agnes Heller looks at both the concept and the image of a Renaissance man. The concept was generalised and accepted by all; its characteristic features were man as a dynamic being, creating and re-creating himself throughout his life. The images of man, however, were very different, having been formed through the ideas and imagination of artists, politicians, philosophers, scientists and theologians and viewed from the different aspects of work, love, fate, death, friendship, devotion and the concepts of space and time. Renaissance Man thus stood as both as a leading protagonist of his time, one who led and formulated the substantial attitudes of his time, and as one who stood as a witness on the sidelines of the discussion. This book, first published in English in 1978, is based on the diverse but equally important sources of autobiographies, works of art and literature, and the writings of philosophers. Although she uses Florence as a starting point, Agnes Heller points out that the Renaissance was a social and cultural phenomenon common to all of Western Europe; her Renaissance Man is thus a figure to be found throughout Europe.

 

Contents

Introduction Is there a Renaissance ideal of man?
1
PART 1 UNEVEN DEVELOPMENT
27
PART 2 ANTIQUITY AND THE JUDAEOCHRISTIAN TRADITION
57
MANS PRACTICAL POSSIBILITIES
147
PART 4 PHILOSOPHICAL ANTHROPOLOGY
371
NOTES
454
INDEX
469
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Ágnes Heller

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