You have found the "BEST" Term Paper site on the Planet!
PLANETPAPERS.COM!

We GUARANTEE that you’ll find an EXEMPLARY College Level Term Paper, Essay, Book Report or Research Paper in seconds or we will write a BRAND NEW paper for you in just a FEW HOURS!!!

150,000+ Papers

Find more results for this search now!
CLICK the BUTTON to the RIGHT!

Please enter a keyword or topic phrase to perform a search.
Need a Brand New Custom Essay Now?  click here

Humanism during the Renaissance

Uploaded by Admin on Jun 28, 2000

During the renaissance, there was a renewed interest in the arts, and the traditional views of society came into question. People began to explore the power of the human mind. A term often used to describe the increasing interest in the powers of the human mind is humanism. Generally, humanism stresses the individual’s creative, reasoning, and aesthetic powers. However, during the Renaissance, individual ideas about humanism differed.

Writers and philosophers of the Renaissance time period expressed their opinions about human nature and human’s roles in the universe through their writings. Pico della Mirandola’s “Oration on the dignity of man”, which glorifies humanity and praises the human ability to reason, offers the opposing view to Shakespeare’s Hamlet and Montaigne’s essay “Man’s presumption and Littleness” which both suggest that humans are no higher in the universal order of things than any other of God’s creatures.

Pico begins his essay by informing his readers that he knows where humans stand in the divine order of the world. Pico believes that humans were the last creatures created by God, and that God’s purpose, in creating them, was to fulfill his desire for someone to appreciate the great wonders and beauties of his world:

When the work was finished, the Craftsman kept wishing that there were someone to ponder the plan of so great a work… therefore… he finally took thought concerning the creation of man. (Mirandola 224)

It is also Pico’s belief that when Humans were created, they were given qualities both divine and earthly, and could become whatever they chose:

We have made thee neither of heaven nor of earth, neither mortal nor immortal, so that with freedom of choice… thou mayest fashion thyself in whatever shape thou shalt prefer. (Mirandola 225)

Pico’s conclusion about human ranking among the divine order of things was that while some people were almost celestial, others were no better than animals, and that this great variance of character among the human population only served to increase their importance and uniqueness from all other of God’s creatures. His essay, which praised human greatness and exalted the powers of humanity, was opposed by more negative views of humanity, as expressed in the works of Montaigne and Shakespeare.

Montaigne’s essay “Man’s presumption and Littleness” belittles the greatness of man so much that he becomes no more than another beast among beasts, possibly even lower than some of God’s other creatures. Montaigne cannot imagine why man...

Sign In Now to Read Entire Essay

Not a Member?   Create Your FREE Account »

Comments / Reviews

read full paper >>

Already a Member?   Login Now >

This paper and THOUSANDS of
other papers are FREE at PlanetPapers.

Uploaded by:   Admin

Date:   06/28/2000

Category:   History

Length:   8 pages (1,865 words)

Views:   3220

Report this Paper Save Paper
Professionally written papers on this topic:

Humanism during the Renaissance

View more professionally written papers on this topic »