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THE
PRELUDE TO MODERN PHILOSOPHY
Modern philosophy is an outgrowth of the spirit
and work of Roger Bacon, John Duns Scotus, and
William of Ockham. These men claimed that
philosophy should be a free and independent inquiry
concerning truth and life.
All modern philosophy is in quest for the
meaning of nature and experience. It rejects the
authority of tradition and works independently of
ecclesiastical dogmas and religious beliefs.
The Catholic Theory Of
The State
The Scholastics had presented a theory of the
State which defined the temporal power of the
hierarchy and subordinated the State to the Church.
They made theology supreme and declared that the
purpose of all government is human welfare. The
Church is the representative of God on earth and
all matters of State are subservient to the Church.
Politics, like philosophy, is therefore the
handmaid of theology.
Opposition To The
Catholic Theory Of The State
The papacy declined in power and prestige and
many Catholic writers gradually forsook the
Catholic idea. The Renaissance and the Protestant
Reformation laid the foundation for new thought and
the new political theories of modern history.
The most radical attack on the Catholic theory
came from Niccolo Machiavelli (1469-1527), an
Italian diplomat and Secretary of the Chancellery
of the Council of Ten at Florence. Machiavelli
opposed the political corruption of the Roman Curia
and the Italian Government. He claimed that the
united, independent, and sovereign Italian nation
must be free from the domination of the Church in
politics, science, and religion.
Christianity was considered too passive; the old
Roman religion was preferred. The best form of
government was republican. In times of corruption
(as witnessed in his day), Machiavelli thought that
absolute despotism is needed to realize the ideal
of a strong and independent State, hence his
argument in his famous work The Prince
(1515). Machiavelli abhorred existing anarchy and
corruption seen in the secular and ecclesiastical
politics of his time. He saw no way out of the
disorder except by force.
New Political Theories
Begin To Appear
During the modern period, the popular
sovereignty of the Ruler takes form and natural law
was commending natural rights. Hugo Grotius
(1583-1645) and some others accepted the theory of
absolutism, which led to Thomas Hobbes' doctrine of
absolutism and to John Locke's and
Rousseau's democracy.
The doctrine of social contract appeared and was
represented by Jean Bodin (1530-1596); the social
contract being committed to the ruler or sovereign.
The notion is growing that the State rests on
reason and human nature and the State is a natural
institution. The idea of the sovereignty of the
people was taking root, but absolutism (theoretical
unlimited power of the ruler) persisted until the
eighteenth century. Eventually the theories of
Locke (England) and Rousseau (France) resulted in
movements for constitutional monarchies or
democracies.
The Renaissance and
Reformation
The Renaissance and Reformation created new
thinking. The Italian Renaissance rebelled against
authority and Scholasticism. The German Reformation
turned attention to the Bible and the protest of
heart and faith against ecclesiastical
mechanization.
The German Reformation opposed a barren
Scholasticism and offered a revived and rejuvenated
evangelical Christianity. It fostered critical
reflection and the tolerance of the scientific
spirit, and thus opposed absolutism and
ecclesiastical authority. A few fanatical religious
sects grew during this period. A new Scholastic
Theology was in the making through Philip
Melanchthon (co-partner with Martin Luther in the
German Reformation) and it recognized the
foundation of Aristotle.
Other reformers (such as John Calvin) return to
Augustine and mysticism, while others (for
instance, Zwingli) follow Neo-Platonism. In the
seventeenth century mysticism finds a strong voice
in Jacob Boehme (1575-1642) in his work
Aurora. A new philosophy of religion, built
on natural rather than supernatural metaphysics,
appears through Herbert of Cherbury
(1583-1648).
The New
Humanism
The new Humanism turned to ancient philosophy,
literature, and art. Skepticism found an able
advocate in Michel de Montaigne (1533-1592).
Despairing reason he urges a return to uncorrupted
nature and revelation. Skepticism kept alive the
spirit of inquiry and fostered the growth of modern
science.
Reason became the authority in science and
philosophy. The idea of the individual was born and
paternalism was opposed. Human reason was made the
highest authority in the pursuit of knowledge based
on the sciences of external nature. But the basic
doctrines of Christianity are still accepted by the
great modern philosophers: Bacon, Descartes, Locke,
Berkeley, and Leibnitz.
The Beginning of Modern
Philosophy
Modern philosophy becomes empirical in tendency
with Bacon, Hobbes, Locke, Berkeley, and Hume.
Criticism awoke, old theological systems with their
traditional authority and ecclesiasticism were
challenged. The individual asserted his
independence.
Philosophy cut loose from theology and nursed
the fires of science. Nominalism became entwined in
the natural study of man. Dante eulogized the
medieval spirit and Goethe (in Faust)
typified the spirit of the Renaissance.
Nature philosophies first appeared in Italy, the
cradle of learning in this period of culture, with
Cardan and Telesio. Science burst forth in Leonardo
da Vinci (1452-1519), Copernicus (1473-1543),
Galileo (1564-1641), Kepler (1571-1630), and Newton
(1642-1727). Pope Leo XIII made the philosophy of
Thomas Aquinas the official philosophy of the
Catholic Church, opposing naturalistic
tendencies.
The New
Science
Scientific development appears in Telesio, who
founded the Telesian Academy, a naturalistic
science society at Naples. Francis Patrizzi
(1529-1597) combined Telesian principles with
Neo-Platonism and Aristotelian forms, essences,
purposes, and ends were replaced by mechanical
explanations of nature determined by fixed
laws.
Kepler's discoveries became the groundwork for
modern astronomy. Robert Boyle (1627-1691)
introduced the atomic theory into chemistry.
Galileo reasserted the atomic theory of Democritus
(there is neither origin nor decay, everything is
atomic movement). Quantitative relations brought
forward mathematical laws and Leonardo, Kepler, and
Galileo took their science from these sources.
Copernicus built his heliocentric theory of
astronomy. Newton discovered the law of gravitation
(1682). Darwin, in the nineteenth century, pushed
these frontiers to apparent conquest. He explained
organic forms organically and mechanically,
rejecting all teleological thought such as vital
force and purpose. The first really modern system
of philosophy is that of Giordano Bruno.
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