Visualizzazione post con etichetta Humanism. Mostra tutti i post
Visualizzazione post con etichetta Humanism. Mostra tutti i post

lunedì 24 marzo 2014

Love in Renaissance – Eros in the philosophy of Marsilio Ficino


Marsilio Ficino
by Olga Lenczewska


As we all realize, often with slight disappointment, virtually everything that has been said or invented in the modern times had been already thought or written in the Ancient times. Renaissance, despite being commonly thought to be the mother of Humanism with its focus on the man and his creations, only revived what had been known a long time before. With its primary mottoes renovatio humanitatis and renovatio antiquitatis, the aim of the Renaissance period was to popularise the ideas of the Ancient Greek and Roman thinkers, Plato being the most influential of them. One of the most prominent individuals thanks to whom modernity became acquainted with and interested in the works of Plato and the Neoplatonists was the Florentine academic, philosopher, and translator Marsilio Ficino.

In the 15th century, Florence was amongst the biggest and most successful cities in Europe, both culturally and economically. Governed by the Medici, the Florentine environment was perfect for Ficino, who wished to establish a philosophical school that would resemble the Platonic Academy.

But Ficino was not only a reviver of the Platonic thought and his follower; he was a philosopher who established an independent system. One of its most interesting features is the theory of the nature and function of Love or, as the philosopher preferred to call it after Plato, Eros. For Plato, Eros was the desire of beauty, and thus also of goodness and truth, the mediating force between the sensible and transcendental world. Ficino incorporated this understanding of Love into Christianity, where the Platonic ideas became associated with religious figures, and reformulated the definition of Eros as the force that drives us towards the divine world of God. It could not have been equated to Dante's love as a fundamental element in the union with God, nor to Boccaccio's love a bias and inclination towards body; Ficino's Eros was a power situated between the body and the soul, i.e., between the empirical world and the intelligible universe.

Furthermore, it had two dimensions – the moral one and the aesthetic one. Firstly, it was a tool that helped us to narrow our distance from God and reduce our mortal imperfection; it was supposed to contribute to people's moral development, pushing them to go beyond their limits in order to assimilate with God. Secondly, Love was necessarily united with beauty in the sense that it helped us understand beauty and the fact that the search for beauty is not limited to the empirical world, but is derived from God himself.

Finally, Eros was understood as a power that circulated in the world, only to return in the end returns to its proper creator, God. It was born in God as beauty; then, when it passed through men and possessed them, it meant love; and finally, when it returned to its creator, God, it became a unity with Him and functioned as moral pleasure: La bellezza divina si diffonde nelle cose e ritorna a sé stessa attraverso l'amore come in un circolo [Kristeller, Il pensiero filosofico di Marsilio Ficino]. Eros, therefore, had to go through three phases and be three things: beauty, love, and moral pleasure. Love, we can say, was understood as a medium of communication between beauty and moral pleasure.

 It goes without saying that the contemporary understanding of Love (if one believes in this concept at all) differs substantially from that of Ficino and the Renaissance. Love is nowadays believed to be a result of a chain of chemical reactions that have little to do with moral perfection, ideal beauty, or narrowing the distance between us and the divine. And yet it is everyone's own decision what he or she believes in, a choice that is not without consequence to one's life. Personally, I feel inclined towards Ficino’s world-view, but the readers have the responsibility to make up their own minds on such an important subject.




mercoledì 17 aprile 2013

Florence as the new model of ethical virtus in the world



Time has come for a New Humanism. In an age of globalization and crisis of values we urgently need to reconsider  humanistic values.
Martha C. Nussbaum aroused a public debate on Humanism with her book “Not for profit. Why democracy needs the humanities”. At the London City the traders are required to take a test in ethics.
A new wind is blowing and ethics can be the new direction of the world.
Florence has been the centre of Humanism and this city had powerful Humanistic thinkers.
In such a dark age as Italy is going through, after a technocrat government that completely alienated Italians and their humanistic traditions, it can be useful to remember two of the most fervid minds of Florence: Niccolò Machiavelli and Francesco Guicciardini.
Both men belonged to the Florentine oligarchy, although Guicciardini’s family was wealthier and more prominent than Machiavelli’s.
Both thinkers during those tormented years were stimulated by Italian tragedy to examine the historical events.
Their reaction in a time of political crisis was creative in the highest degree, for it contributed to the formulation of new concepts of politics and of the historical process, which is indeed what we lack of today.
Today we live in a world populated by an entitlement culture, made of egotism and primarily concerned with financial interests that tend to favor a selected oligarchy.
We live in a culture where personal success is principally measured on compensation. We live in a time where the policies of democratic systems have been infected by financial power provoking a vacuum in terms of culture and values.
Following the example of those fervid thinkers today we should educate our society in visualizing virtus, which means to relaunch ethics as a primary value for the future leading classes.
For this reason, for its history and tradition and as a symbol of Humanism in the world, Florence should become an open space for training (visualization) the future ruling classes in ethics.
International symposiums and meetings on ethics should be organized in this city. Teaching Ethics to the world could be the new economy for this city, in virtue of her glorious past.