The Poet's Wisdom: The Humanists, the Church, and the Formation of Philosophy in the Early Renaissance

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The book explores the philosophical thinking of Petrarch and Boccaccio in contrast to the writings of contemporary mendicants. Examining both Latin and vernacular works, it investigates how these humanists poetically express the temporal, subjective, and emotional quality of moral sensibility, in a way that shifts to the reader the weight of discerning the ethical message. The book centers its analysis on a series of paradoxes pondered by these humanists: the self that changes yet persists over time; the awareness of self-deception; the individual's validation of authority; and the ethics of pleasure. This study is valuable to those interested in Renaissance philosophy, literature, religion, and the history of ideas.

Author(s): Timothy Kircher
Series: Brill's Studies in Intellectual History, 133
Publisher: Brill
Year: 2006

Language: English
Pages: 332
City: Leiden

Acknowledgements ix
List of Illustrations xi
I. Introduction 3
II. Tracking the Vagaries of Time: Anxiety and Freedom in Humanist Accounts of the Plague of 1348 43
III. Morality’s Hazy Mirror: The Humanist Modality of Moral Communication in the 'Decameron' 99
IV. The Paradox of Experience and Moral Authority in Petrarch’s Writings 145
V. The Sea as an Image of Temporality 185
VI. The Ethics of Pleasure: Faces of the Feminine 229
VII. Senescence and Renascence 283
Bibliography 297
Index 311