RENAISSANCE HUMANISM     Revival of classical literature and learning:

         defined as literary, cultural, and educational movement based on
              recovery of classical Latin, then Greek texts (14-15th C.): e.g.
      context: rise of interest in classical Latin literature among
              literate laymen, notaries (ars dictaminis = letter writing), lawyers
            = first intellectual movement dominated by laymen, rather than clerics

  new curriculum: use classical texts for study of human life, morality
      studia humanitatis: study of things human (i.e. not divine, not natural)
                        grammar (Latin), rhetoric, poetry, history, moral philosophy

     compare medieval scholastic curriculum of seven liberal arts:

         trivium: grammar,   rhetoric, logic (& dialectics)                                             
            quadrivium: arithmetic, astronomy, geometry, music = (natural philosophy)

 What did Renaissance Humanists learn from their classical studies?
            classical Latin literature as moralizing, practical, this-worldly virtues
                        aim to teach good conduct, responsibilities in social relationships
            eg: Cicero De Officiis (On Duty); Seneca Epistles: Stoic moral philosopher
            context for pursuit and definition of virtue is human life in this world,
                         not Christian context of eternal salvation or damnation (as for Dante)

Purpose of knowledge:
            scholasticism: 1) pursuit of abstract, rational intellectual truth
                        about God, creation (mankind as part of creation), Redemption
              2) encyclopedic approach to knowledge sub specie eternitatis
                         truth is ahistorical, beyond time (under the eye of eternity)
            humanism: 1) moralizing, practical approach to knowledge as
                        useful to men, to improve human nature, inculcate human virtues
                        Petrarch: "It is better to will the good than know the truth."
              2) historical approach to knowledge of the classics in their own historical context
                        eg: Petrarch sees Cicero in context of late Roman Republican politics

   Humanist careers as civil servants in Republican context: humanist learning in service of state

         Coluccio Salutati: 1) lawyer, Florentine Chancellor (1375-1406)
                            skills: formal Latin correspondence, oratorical ability (rhetoric),

                         panegyrics (speech in praise of city, ruler etc.), history

               2)  role as humanist educator: defends curriculum of studia humanitatis
                       against Dominican clerics attack on study of classics as 'pagan' texts

              3)  role in war of Giangaleazzo Visconti of Milan (1397-1402) against Florence

   Leonardo Bruni (Chancellor) rhetorical defense of republic (Baron thesis)

                     In Praise of the City of Florence 1400: republican liberty versus Milanese tyranny
                        History of the City of Florence : humanist imitation of Roman history

Recovery of Greek Learning: 1453 = fall of Constantinople to Turks

         Marsilio Ficino (1433-1499) humanists under patronage of Cosimo di Medici
               established in Villa Careggi outside Florence , called "Platonic Academy"
               1462: Ficino begins translation of Plato's Dialogues: crucial moment Greek revival

         Giovanni Pico della Mirandola (1463-1494)    Oration on the Dignity of Man
               high estimate of potential of human nature (unlike traditionally Christian view)

            recovery of all ancient texts as basis for synthesis of all knowledge