The Myth of Sisyphus: Renaissance Theories of Human PerfectibilityFairleigh Dickinson Univ Press, 2007 - 614 ページ 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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... lover . V. Francesco Petrarch's erotic and spiritual lover in Il Canzoniere . VI . Pierre de Ronsard's perfectibility of sensual love in Les Amours de Cassandre and Sonets pour Hélène . VII . Sir Philip Sidney and the aspirations and ...
... lover . V. Francesco Petrarch's erotic and spiritual lover in Il Canzoniere . VI . Pierre de Ronsard's perfectibility of sensual love in Les Amours de Cassandre and Sonets pour Hélène . VII . Sir Philip Sidney and the aspirations and ...
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... lover's spiritual and erotic quest for his union with the divine , the Good , and the Beautiful . " Sisyphus as lover " aspires to a love of God that could induct him into the mystery of Eros as a communion between heavenly and earthly ...
... lover's spiritual and erotic quest for his union with the divine , the Good , and the Beautiful . " Sisyphus as lover " aspires to a love of God that could induct him into the mystery of Eros as a communion between heavenly and earthly ...
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目次
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 |
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achieve actual Aeschylus appears archetypal argues ascending aspirations assertion attempt attributes authority beauty become believed beloved body Books Cambridge Chicago Christian created creative cyclical death descending desire divine earthly edited English Erasmus eternal evil excellence existence experience expression faith fall forms frustrated gods grace heart hero heroic human being's human perfectibility idea ideal identified imagination imperfect inspired intellectual interpretation John justice Knight knowledge labor language Laura laws living London lover magic means mind moral mysteries myth myth of Sisyphus nature never Oxford perfectibility perpetual person Petrarch Philip philosophy physical poem poet Poetry Princeton punishment Queene quest rational reason Reformation Renaissance reveal rhetorical rock-burden sensual Sidney Sisyphean Sisyphus social society soul Spenser spiritual Studies summit symbolizes things Thomas thought tion transcendent transformed Translated true truth ultimate University Press Utopia virtue vision whole wisdom York Zeus
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