Humanism PDF
Humanism PDF
Humanism PDF
The trivium, the center of medieval and classical education, was made
up of grammar, rhetoric, and dialectic. Grammar was the study of not
only the proper use of language, but how authors used language to
make meaning, especially poets and historians. A great deal of what we
consider literary criticism, literary studies, and history was in the
middle ages the province of grammar. Dialectic was the science of
disputation, proof, and propositions. In the high middle ages, dialectic
was dominated by the Aristotelean or Averroistic tradition (named
after Aristotle, the Greek philospoher, and the medieval Arabic
commentator on Aristotle, Averroes); this was called the Scholastic
tradition in logic because its advocates were the university teachers, or
"schoolmen." Scholastic dialectic aimed at using language to produce
certainty; as such, it focussed on syllogism, which is the
construction of a truthful conclusion from truthful premises. The third
art of the trivium, rhetoric, was the art of persuasion and included all
those techniques with language, including syllogism, whereby a
speaker could convince an audience of the truth or correctness of what
he was saying. It was in these arts, the arts of language, that the
humanists centered their attention.
Yet for all that, the very first humanists were not educators, but rather
private men of independent means or lawyers. The most famous in the
former group, and the person often acknowledged as a founding figure
of humanism, was Petrarch (1304-1374), and the most famous
representative of the latter group was Coluccio Salutati (1331-1406).
Petrarch
Rome (Cicero)
Coluccio Salutati
Like Petrarch, Salutati was not involved in education but was one of
the originary figures in that educational movement we would eventually
call humanism. Salutati was more typical of the early humanists that
followed in the path that Petrarch had set down, that is, in recovering
the literature of antiquity. Most of these early humanists were lawyers
that worked as high officials or notaries for the the church or the
various Italian states. Salutati and others followed the model Petrarch
had set down and used their positions to disseminate classical culture
and apply it to civic government and education. They became models of
a new kind of public official, one that was schooled in antiquity and
represented the Ciceronian ideals of eloquence, wisdom, and duty.
Education
It has been stressed over and over again that humanism was neither a
philosophy nor a movement, but an educational curriculum. In its
earliest stages, the groundwork for this curriculum was laid down by
private individuals such as Petrarch and public officials, such as
Salutati. Humanism as an educational curriculum began in the early
years of the fourteenth century in Italy. The two foundational figures in
humanist education were Guarino Veronese (1374-1406) in Ferrara and
Vittorino da Feltre (1373-1446) at Mantua. They each independently
designed an entire curriculum for their young students consisting of
physical and intellectual eduation. They used the newly rediscovered
texts of Quintilian as the model of their educational program; students
had to master both Latin and Greek as well as acquire a thorough
grounding in the works of Cicero, Plato, and Aristotle. This would
become the model of Renaissance education in the century to follow.
Eloquence
The ability to persuade others by using the arts of language was called
eloquence. The study of eloquence involved learning both grammar
and rhetoric. Through the study of language and poetry, students
learned in grammar how to create meaning in language as well as
appropriateness. The Renaissance humanists also stressed grammar as
teaching students how to use Latin properly. The best way to use Latin
was to imitate the style of the classical authors. (The imitation of the
classics was a staple in European education right into the early years of
the twentieth century). Rhetoric involved a whole host of processes; the
central processes were invention and elocution. Elocution refers to
the way in which one delivers a speech. Invention, however, is the
process whereby a speaker finds the material to make his argument.
That's the core of rhetoric and the stuff that the average student spent
learning from humanist teachers. The material of argument included
arguments, proofs, and the fashioning of language; the entire purpose
of the invention process was to persuade the audience that what you
were arguing was true. You didn't have to convince them that your
argument was absolutely true, you only had to persuade them to act as
if what you were arguing was true.
Ancient Greece
Skepticism
Logic
Literary Studies
Lorenzo Valla
Civic Humanism