Perhaps the most we can assume is that the man of the Renaissance lived, as it were, between two worlds. The world of the medieval Christian matrix, ... Indeed, as the age of Renaissance humanism wore on, the distinction between this world (the City of Man) and the next (the City of God) tended to disappear.
www.historyguide.org/intellect/humanism.html www.historyguide.org/intellect/humanism.html
Renaissance humanism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Renaissance humanism was a European intellectual movement that was a crucial component of the Renaissance, beginning in Florence in the latter half of the 14th century. The humanist movement develope...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Renaissance_humanism
The title 'Renaissance Humanism' is applied to the philosophical and cultural movement that swept across Europe from the 14th through 16th centuries, effectively ending the Middle Ages and leading into the modern era. ... The central focus of Renaissance Humanism was, quite simply, human beings. Humans were praised for...
atheism.about.com/od/abouthumanism/a/renaissance.htm atheism.about.com/od/abouthumanism/a/renaissance.htm
Humanism; Part of the Library of Congress's; Vatican exhibit, this page focuses on the meaning and effects of humanism during the; Renaissance.
www.learner.org/exhibits/renaissance/printing_sub.html www.learner.org/exhibits/renaissance/printing_sub.html
Renaissance Humanism is the spirit of learning that developed at the end of the middle ages with the revival of classical letters and a renewed confidence in the ability of human beings to determine for themselves truth and falsehood.
www.jcn.com/humanism.html www.jcn.com/humanism.html
Images and descriptions of items relating to humanism from the Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana; part of the Library of Congress' “Rome Reborn: The Vatican Library & Renaissance Culture” exhibit ... The great intellectual movement of Renaissance Italy was humanism. The humanists believed that the Greek and Latin...
www.loc.gov/exhibits/vatican/humanism.html www.loc.gov/exhibits/vatican/humanism.html
The great intellectual movement of Renaissance Italy was humanism. The humanists believed that the Greek and Latin classics contained both all the lessons one needed to lead a moral and effective life and the best models for a powerful Latin style.
www.ibiblio.org/expo/vatican.exhibit/exhibit/c-humanism... www.ibiblio.org/expo/vatican.exhibit/exhibit/c-humanism/Humanism.html
Thus the original work by Leonardo Bruni (1369-1444) on the first Punic war, which is found in this fifteenth-century manuscript, represents a critical moment in the development of Florentine civic humanism. ... Marsilio Ficino (1433 ­ 1499) was the most influential representative of Renaissance Platonism.
www.lib.uchicago.edu/e/spcl/excat/berlin/renaissa.html
Humanism is the name given to the intellectual, literary, and scientific movement of the fourteenth to the sixteenth centuries, a movement which aimed at basing every branch of learning on the literature and culture of classical antiquity.
www.newadvent.org/cathen/07538b.htm