Tuesday, February 3, 2015

The Role of the Past: Essential or Prevalent?

“Ugly hell gape not! Come not, Lucifer! 
I’ll burn my books—” - Dr. Faustus,
(The Tragical History of the Life and Death of Doctor Faustus)

Dr. Faustus makes a fatal deal
            If someone as rooted in the humanistic ideals of the renaissance, as the fictional character of Dr. Faustus was, can turn on all of their vast knowledge they had gained to turn back to God truly the idea of returning to the past had perhaps the largest implications during the renaissance time period. Christopher Marlowe’s character is clear evidence that Psalm 42 (from the Vulgate Bible) had major relevance during the renaissance time period, which states in English “In the same way that the stag is drawn unto the sources of water, so is my soul drawn unto you, God.” In considering this, how big of an effect did the past have upon the other themes present during the renaissance? My initial conclusion was this: without the ideas of the past (Greek and Roman rhetoric, religious traditions of medieval and Christian eras) that the other major themes present during the renaissance such as exploration, humanism, and the rise of the reformation would have never came to be.

            With similar fire that Martin Luther had in his response to Erasmus of Rotterdam on the topic of free will, I brought these thoughts to my classmate’s attention. Of those of whom I was discussing the importance of returning to the past, Kekoa asked a question that forced me to reconsider my previous position, and reevaluate the important role that the past had during the renaissance. He proposed, “Is it really that the other themes would not exist without the role of returning to the past, or is it simply the most overlapping theme of the period, with respect to the other themes?” What a question! The studied carelessness of his question really pushed me into a corner, which soon opened up into a brand new space full of what was most likely a more appropriate idea concerning this theme of returning to the past.



Mount Ventoux
            Rather than being the keystone to the other themes of the renaissance, the idea and importance of returning to the past for many of the major figures during this time period was that of a basis to build their own ideas. Petrarch climb up Mount Ventoux is very illustrative of what the past’s role was in all the other themes of the renaissance. There Petrarch could see back and forth, past and future, and see things from a far, which allows the eye to pick out the good and leave the bad. Much of the returning to the past done during the renaissance and reformation was done in this light. Erasmus of Rotterdam clearly returned to reason over scriptural testimony in his address on free will. Erasmus is one who clearly had respect for and a desire to understand the rhetoricians of the past, giving much respect to the systematized rhetoric of Aristotle. The act of reflecting on the sources, and returning to the past completely shaped the way that humanistic ideas formed, as well as other themes present during the reformation and renaissance.

2 comments:

  1. This idea greatly coincides with my theory of the Renaissance being alive. For some, it is a set of check boxes and one must happen for the next to occur. One phase not affecting the next. However, the Renaissance is a living organism, constantly feeding upon the ideas, principles, and discoveries of the past to build the future. I don't think we can pinpoint the Renaissance to a single idea or theory. Rather all are required to the development of the era as a whole. I just find it that we still do this now. They returned to the past in the form of ancient Greek and Latin and we return to them for our past.

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  2. I agree with Michelle, I see the themes of the Renaissance as the elements of a car. Useless without a driver. Pointless without passengers. Perhaps foolish without luggage. Immobile without gasoline. All these parts are no more important than the other. All are effective alone but much more effective together. P.S. I had an extra section in my blog post based on insights from you but it put me over the 500 words. Thanks for your insight during the Salon!

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