Renaissance Philosophy
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Narrateur(s):
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Poskas
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Auteur(s):
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Boris Kriger
À propos de cet audio
What if philosophy does not march neatly through centuries, but circles back, collides, falters, and begins again in unexpected places?
This book is not a museum of doctrines or a dry catalog of names and dates. It is a journey through the restless spirit of European thought—from Petrarch’s anxious letters to the ancients, to Pico della Mirandola’s vision of human dignity, from Ficino’s hymns to harmony, to Bruno’s infinite cosmos, from Machiavelli’s stark realism to Montaigne’s gentle skepticism, from Bacon’s call for experience to Descartes’s radical doubt and Spinoza’s infinite substance.
Here, philosophy appears not as a frozen system, but as a living tension: between faith and reason, beauty and rigor, body and soul, order and freedom. It is the story of how man, once a shadow in the divine hierarchy, awoke to his own voice, his own dignity, and his own power to shape the world.
Written in a clear, vivid, and unsentimental style, this book shows how the Renaissance prepared the ground for modernity—how the revival of ancient texts became the seedbed for science, politics, and the idea of the individual. It is a portrait of philosophy not as an academic exercise, but as a personal quest, a way of grappling with fear, joy, doubt, and the infinite.
This is the story of man’s awakening—from contemplator to creator, from echo to voice, from image to measure.
Keywords
Philosophy, Renaissance, Humanism, Reason, Freedom, Knowledge, Modernity