He comments sharply on the changes in British society and re-endorses the importance of humanist over materialist values. |
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The humanist notion symbolizes for me our basic human needs and personal achievements. |
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It's hardly surprising when the stories are all really much of a muchness, eagerly evoking some humanist vision of the universal spirit. |
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His connection with humanist circles in Vienna led him to explore in music the metres of classical poetry. |
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He produced title pages and book illustrations for humanist texts, and antique imagery and classical lore pervade his early work. |
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Rising humanist interest accompanied the more widespread collection, discussion, and depiction of ancient works of art. |
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It has been turned into a more humanist approach founded, among others, on the works of the winner of a Nobel Prize for economics, Amartya Sen. |
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Shortly after the beginning of the Spanish Civil War, a gentle, spectacled professor of ethics embraced a fellow humanist in Paris. |
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He is undoubtedly a humanist, the way he ties his characters together, but he is also a burgeoning formalist, judging by this film. |
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Last year in Scotland, 27 weddings, three naming ceremonies and 233 funerals were conducted by humanist officiants. |
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Yesterday it was standing room only in the chapel during the short, humanist service conducted by the chapel officiant. |
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In June 2005, it became legal for a humanist celebrant to perform marriages. |
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The literary celebration of a city was just one of many stylistic exercises practised by Bruni and his humanist associates. |
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In 2000, he was the only known secular humanist to have been a viable candidate for a seat. |
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So, naturally, humanist funerals tend to be simple and unadorned, stripped of any ritualistic trappings. |
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In literature, the Renaissance was led by humanist scholars and poets, notably Petrarch, Dante, and Boccaccio in Italy. |
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These objects confirmed us in a traditional humanist understanding of the world beyond our own. |
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It seems Cassavetes was foremost a humanist who lived to record our crazy, mad ways. |
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Dramatic performance and rhetoric were taught at Oxford and Cambridge as part of a classical humanist education. |
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Erskine became well known for his humanist town planning in Britain and Sweden. |
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The emergence of post-structuralism in the 1960s had radical implications for humanist thinking and the ideas of personhood. |
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Growing numbers believe that these humanist aspirations are essential for the well-being and continuance of our species. |
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In doing so he echoes the humanist pragmatism of Florentine practical mathematics a century before. |
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Me, I am a secular humanist who believes in the dignity of all members of the human race. |
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He attempts to present a world view in which humans are not central and which argues against the humanist belief in progress. |
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Science, he argues, is necessarily reductive, and reductive science undermines humanist ideas about phenomena such as consciousness or free will. |
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This introduction makes a direct connection between the intent of the collection and the humanist dream of resurrecting and applying the past. |
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It is a humanist vision that in every culture people can attain freedom and enable all to achieve their potential in their own chosen way. |
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You have the Augustinian teaching orders, which introduced Classical humanist methods of education for young people to Europe. |
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It is unlikely, in contrast to Mantegna, that he devised his own allegories, though he was well known in Medicean humanist circles. |
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The history of Europe post Reformation and then of America reads progressively more like a humanist cliff-hanger than a religious tract. |
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At a humanist ceremony at York Crematorium, conducted by Maggie Blunt, mourners sat and kneeled in the aisles because every seat was taken. |
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He can at times sound rather more discomfortingly like a radical humanist. |
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Despite her clinical background, though, Bloom wanted to keep the curious, humanist tone of the essay, rather than creating a psychological casebook. |
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The student who enters grad school intent on becoming a traditional humanist is the student who will be labelled as hopelessly unsophisticated by her peers and her professors. |
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Marx may be described as a humanist, and in this century humanism has been given expression, in both secular and religious forms, in the philosophy of existentialism. |
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Giovanni Boccaccio, the great 14th century Italian humanist writer offers us a humorous insight into the corruption and decadence of the Church of his day. |
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This has something to do with humanism, and humanist rationality. |
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If Kim Jong-il was dictatorial, sociopathic, and inhumane, Vaclav Havel was a freedom-loving, warm-hearted humanist. |
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He was no stranger to the tenets of humanist educational theory. |
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The young radical humanist became a revolutionary socialist. |
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He is a secular humanist, but also a deeply spiritual thinker. |
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I would classify myself as both a humanist and a secularist. |
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So not only would I consider myself a feminist, but I would consider myself a humanist. |
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She makes humanist documentaries of uncommon intelligence and wit. |
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A cultural practice that is manifestly wrong on humanist grounds becomes the excuse for a colonizing mission whose tactics are in turn violent and unjust. |
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In 1519 the German humanist Ulrich von Hutton wrote a treatise on guaiacum, a new wonder drug from the Americas that was believed to cure syphilis. |
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He cast himself as a sort of acoustic space cadet, a folksy psychadelicist who tries to hard for weird chords and lets-scream-this-all-together humanist anthems. |
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His novel is underpinned by an implicit liberal humanist argument. |
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Perhaps, Milton's England makes the author of the brief epic more severe towards the humanist tradition he has inherited than Elizabethan England does for Spenser. |
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The burden that is laid upon a humanist or an atheist or someone who is not bound by any ideology or creed is that you believe in nothing but you believe in anything. |
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Eight years earlier, in fact, he had written a famously warm and richly nuanced description of the family in a letter to the German humanist Ulrich von Hutten. |
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I think it's stunning and beautiful and devastating and I think could easily be rescued from its apparent theism and reinterpreted as a proper humanist hymn. |
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Their initial struggle for survival soon turns into a desperate and deadly power struggle between two groups, one humanist and civilised, the other savage and militarist. |
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In spite of some of the obscure, antiquarian concerns of humanist engagement with the music of the classical past, the impact of humanism itself should not be underestimated. |
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As a result, concern for the salvation of souls has been replaced by pseudosociology, pop psychology, and humanist theology. |
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Such a solution only puts the humanist in a cleft stick by trading the problem of malnutrition for that of over-population. |
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Renaissance scholars employed the humanist method in study, and searched for realism and human emotion in art. |
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Churchmen such as Erasmus and Luther proposed reform to the Church, often based on humanist textual criticism of the New Testament. |
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Acceptance of Renaissance art was furthered by the continuous arrival of humanist thought in the country. |
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Once humanist professors joined the university faculty, they began to transform the study of grammar and rhetoric through the studia humanitatis. |
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He also painted the occasional portrait, making his international mark with portraits of the humanist Desiderius Erasmus of Rotterdam. |
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He was welcomed into the humanist circle of Thomas More, where he quickly built a high reputation. |
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During this first stay in England, Holbein worked largely for a humanist circle with ties to Erasmus. |
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In Basel, he was favoured by humanist patrons, whose ideas helped form his vision as a mature artist. |
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His Body of the Dead Christ in the Tomb of 1522 expresses a humanist view of Christ in tune with the reformist climate in Basel at the time. |
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Hamlet reflects the contemporary scepticism promoted by the French Renaissance humanist Michel de Montaigne. |
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Orwell was an atheist who identified himself with the humanist outlook on life. |
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To be a humanist, one has first to love human beings, and to be a great humanist, one has to be slightly detached from them. |
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His funeral was the first Welsh national funeral, akin to a state funeral, as well as the first national funeral led by a humanist celebrant. |
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In the 14th century, the predominant academic trend of scholasticism was challenged by the humanist movement. |
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As a free thinker, humanist, and inventor, Gutenberg also grew up within the Renaissance, but influenced it greatly as well. |
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In this classical humanist view, customs differ but people everywhere are prone to cruelty, a quality that Montaigne detested. |
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Parentucelli later became a tutor, in Florence, to the families of the Strozzi and Albizzi, where he met the leading humanist scholars. |
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Although Francis did not receive a humanist education, he was more influenced by humanism than any previous French king. |
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Like his father, Francesco received a fine humanist education and studied the classics, learning both Latin and a little Greek. |
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One view is that Zwingli was trained as an Erasmian humanist and Luther played a decisive role in changing his theology. |
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Following this event, Zwingli and other humanist friends petitioned the bishop on 2 July to abolish the requirement of celibacy on the clergy. |
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Zwingli was a humanist and a scholar with many devoted friends and disciples. |
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Addressing the education of priests had been a fundamental focus of the humanist reformers in the past. |
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The Jesuits became preachers, confessors to monarchs and princes, and humanist educators. |
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The three rivals also share some similar values, with all three embracing a humanist philosophy emphasizing moral behavior and human perfection. |
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Once, the humanist idea used to animate the very core of the university. |
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The first wave includes humanist, anthropocentric, biocentric, and ecocentric ideologies. |
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Forty years had passed since humanist leaders looked upon democratic socialism as an antidote to economic ills. |
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In this meticulous and engagingly written study, David Collins examines the phenomenon of humanist hagiography. |
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We wanted a humanist ceremony and when we spoke to the celebrant about different options, we selected the lighting of candles and handfasting. |
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Yet the skeptical understanding should not eviscerate the humanist commitment. |
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At the same time, the autogenesis of the work tends to invert causal relations in such a way as to put into question humanist notions of the subject. |
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Erasmus of Rotterdam, an influential humanist and rejecter of war, regarded the Ottoman Turks as barbarians and monstrous beasts, and thus approved of war against them. |
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The Origin of Species was published in 1859, long after romantic struggleism had become a popular philosophy, and Darwin himself was a thoroughgoing liberal humanist. |
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Another view is that Zwingli did not pay much attention to Luther's theology and in fact he considered it as part of the humanist reform movement. |
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Published at his own expense in 1532, it showed that he was a humanist in the tradition of Erasmus with a thorough understanding of classical scholarship. |
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The new humanist learning had been hitherto looked on with suspicion in Rome, a possible source of schism and heresy from an unhealthy interest in paganism. |
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Said maintained that the contradiction between the warm, humanist world of Britain that was best exampled by Austen's idealised, bucolic English countryside vs. |
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Following the Renaissance in Europe, the humanist aesthetic and the high technical standards of Greek art inspired generations of European artists. |
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This humanist approach favored reason, nature and aesthetics. |
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Robert Reid, Abbot of Kinloss and later Bishop of Orkney, was responsible in the 1520s and 1530s for bringing the Italian humanist Giovanni Ferrario to teach at Kinloss Abbey. |
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By 1497 the humanist and historian Hector Boece, who was born in Dundee and studied at Paris, returned to become the first principal at the new university of Aberdeen. |
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When humanist scholar George Buchanan wrote his history Rerum Scoticarum Historia in the 1570s, a great deal of lurid detail had been added to the story. |
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There are also Unitarian Universalist, Baha'i, Sikh, Jain, Shinto, Confucian, Taoist, Druid, Native American, Wiccan, humanist and deist communities. |
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He described himself as a humanist and was a Distinguished Supporter of the British Humanist Association and an Honorary Associate of the National Secular Society. |
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A month later, however, the exiled Charles II and his party published the defence of monarchy Defensio Regia pro Carolo Primo, written by leading humanist Claudius Salmasius. |
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Marlowe wrote the only play about the life of Edward II up to his time, taking the humanist literary discussion of male sexuality much further than his contemporaries. |
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One of the portraits was of Lais of Corinth, mistress of Apelles, the famous artist of Greek antiquity after whom Holbein was named in humanist circles. |
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Erasmus wrote textbooks for the school and St Paul's was the first English school to teach Greek, reflecting the humanist interests of the founder. |
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In law, Andreas Alciatus infused the Corpus Juris with a humanist perspective, while Jacques Cujas humanist writings were paramount to his reputation as a jurist. |
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For instance, Andreas Vesalius was educated in a humanist fashion before producing a translation of Galen, whose ideas he verified through his own dissections. |
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Many young Hungarians studying at Italian universities came closer to the Florentine humanist center, so a direct connection with Florence evolved. |
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Although Italian Renaissance had a modest impact in Portuguese arts, Portugal was influential in broadening the European worldview, stimulating humanist inquiry. |
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Many of the period's foremost theologians were followers of the humanist method, including Erasmus, Zwingli, Thomas More, Martin Luther, and John Calvin. |
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The humanist concern with widening education was shared by the Protestant reformers, with a desire for a godly people replacing the aim of having educated citizens. |
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By 1497, the humanist and historian Hector Boece, born in Dundee, returned from Paris to become the first principal at the new university of Aberdeen. |
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This is a reference to a type of drama-based pedagogy called ethopoeia, which formed a central component of the humanist grammar school curriculum. |
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His career of humanist, legal, and philosophical studies, teaching, and writing took him from Belluno to Venice, Padua, Olive, Rome, Florence, and Piacenza. |
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