Talk:Humanists: Difference between revisions
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(sidenote, text near bottom or sub dot point) |
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[[User:Tobin|Tobin]] |
[[User:Tobin|Tobin]] |
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Can we get a basic list of Humanist Texts for SCA people in here somewhere ? |
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I've got a well-thumbed copy of Castiglione, and I guess Guiccardini's History of Italy could go in there somewhere. |
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We should probably avoid some of Ficino's more erm Applied Philosophy works. |
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Anton |
Revision as of 00:01, 14 November 2003
I think the "You can quote several Greek texts"... dot point that Del asked I make the "Specific names to drop" dot point a sidenote to might look better as follows:
- You can quote several Greek texts and take delight in doing so. You know the works of a few ancient Greek writers and the names of a lot more of them, which you are happy to name-drop and wave in the faces of those around you (see sidenote). Specific names to drop could be:
- oratory (ie making speeches) ; Cicero ... 'Even Cicero could not have improved that speech'
- poetry ; refer to someone as 'a second Ovid', or 'our Dante'
- geometry ; emphasise how impressive modern, Italian style fortifications are, with their precise geometry, ravelins, counterscarps and so on.
- philosophy ; emphasise you aren't one of Aristotle's Monkeys (like a scholastic, but that Plato is far superior to him).
Can we get a basic list of Humanist Texts for SCA people in here somewhere ?
I've got a well-thumbed copy of Castiglione, and I guess Guiccardini's History of Italy could go in there somewhere.
We should probably avoid some of Ficino's more erm Applied Philosophy works.
Anton