The Myth of Sisyphus: Renaissance Theories of Human PerfectibilityFairleigh Dickinson Univ Press, 2007 - 614 The myth of Sisyphus symbolizes the idealization of human excellence as a perpetual process of becoming over the impossibility of absolute achievement. In Stoic philosophy, the writing of the Early Church Fathers, and in its allegorical interpretations in medieval and renaissance mythologies, Sisyphus is the archetypal model of human perfectibility. This Sisyphean archetype is a principal theme in renaissance theories of astral magic in the works of Pico, Ficino, Reuchlin, Paracelsus, Agrippa, and Dee. Erasmus, Melanchthon, and Ascham, and in utopian thought from More to Bacon. Sisyphus illuminates the sacred mysteries of life in the works of Philo Judaeus, Plato, Nicholas Cusanus, and Ficino; the spiritual and sensual contraries of love in the dialogues of Leone Ebreo, Bembo, and Bruno; and the tribulations of the unrequited lover in the works of Petrarch, Ronsard, and Sidney. |
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Strona 9
... Authority of the Uni- versity of Haifa and Patrick Maestracci for the financial assistance that sup- ported the preparation of this book , as well as to Dick Bruggeman at the Research Authority for his good advice , and to Michal Barkai ...
... Authority of the Uni- versity of Haifa and Patrick Maestracci for the financial assistance that sup- ported the preparation of this book , as well as to Dick Bruggeman at the Research Authority for his good advice , and to Michal Barkai ...
Strona 17
... authority could also be used to instill a profound social reverence for obedience to all forms of religious and political authorities . Sisyphus ' cyclical labor symbolizes the extent to which his erudition and eloquence work toward his ...
... authority could also be used to instill a profound social reverence for obedience to all forms of religious and political authorities . Sisyphus ' cyclical labor symbolizes the extent to which his erudition and eloquence work toward his ...
Strona 19
... authority and order in the world through heroic action . However , like Sisy- phus , the hero who aspires to defend the transcendence of divine power in nature risks becoming a competitor with the gods as if the process of his ascending ...
... authority and order in the world through heroic action . However , like Sisy- phus , the hero who aspires to defend the transcendence of divine power in nature risks becoming a competitor with the gods as if the process of his ascending ...
Strona 24
... authority and power against which he is rebelling . The hero is inspired by his subjective spirit of discontent to refashion the world in his own image . His iconoclasistic temper imagines society as a mutable process of becoming , and ...
... authority and power against which he is rebelling . The hero is inspired by his subjective spirit of discontent to refashion the world in his own image . His iconoclasistic temper imagines society as a mutable process of becoming , and ...
Strona 32
... authority , which suppress the desire for transcendence , and the domain in the underworld where those aspirants are punished . Sisyphus was the quintessential human aspirant , who used his intellect and will to threaten an alleged ...
... authority , which suppress the desire for transcendence , and the domain in the underworld where those aspirants are punished . Sisyphus was the quintessential human aspirant , who used his intellect and will to threaten an alleged ...
Spis treści
27 | |
50 | |
67 | |
86 | |
Sisyphus as Astral Magician | 110 |
Sisyphus as Humanist | 136 |
Sisyphus as Lover | 193 |
Sisyphus as Hero | 313 |
Notes | 427 |
Bibliography | 544 |
Index | 597 |
Inne wydania - Wyświetl wszystko
The Myth of Sisyphus: Renaissance Theories of Human Perfectibility Elliott M. Simon Podgląd niedostępny - 2007 |
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