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Full Idea
Ages are to be assessed by their positive forces - and by this assessment the age of the Renaissance, so prodigal and so fateful, appears as the last great age.
Gist of Idea
Judging by the positive forces, the Renaissance was the last great age
Source
Friedrich Nietzsche (Twilight of the Idols [1889], 8.37)
Book Ref
Nietzsche,Friedrich: 'Twilight of the Idols and The Anti-Christ', ed/tr. Hollingdale,R.J. [Penguin 1972], p.91
A Reaction
I suspect that Nietzsche places art very high among the positive forces. Science and technology showed barely a glimmer during the Renaissance. Mathematics moved very little, Copernicus was ignored, and logic was static.
8074 | There is a five shilling fine for each point of divergence from the thinking of Aristotle [Oxford Univ 1350] |
8011 | Aristotle is a buffoon who has misled the Church [Luther, by MacIntyre] |
23122 | Montaigne was the founding father of liberalism [Montaigne, by Gopnik] |
18330 | Judging by the positive forces, the Renaissance was the last great age [Nietzsche] |
9291 | The dating, in 1614, of the Hermetic writings as post-Christian is the end of the Renaissance [Yates] |
9288 | The magic of Asclepius enters Renaissance thought mixed into Ficino's neo-platonism [Yates] |
8013 | In the Reformation, morality became unconditional but irrational, individually autonomous, and secular [MacIntyre] |