Saving Renaissance and Reformation: History, Grammar, and Disagreements with the Dead

Journal Title: Religions - Year 2012, Vol 3, Issue 3

Abstract

Renaissance and Reformation used to serve historians as the main terms with which to refer to European history from roughly 1300–1600. Today those terms are commonly replaced with early modern history, and the periodization of European history into ancient, medieval, and modern periods itself is looking increasingly suspect. There are good reasons for those changes. But they obscure both the significance of disagreements dividing the living from the dead and the significance of grammar, in the fundamental sense of grammar advanced by Wittgenstein, for treating such disagreements. Renaissance and Reformation have the advantage of doing just the opposite: they confront us with both those disagreements and the significance of grammar. That makes them very much worth keeping.

Authors and Affiliations

Constantin Fasolt

Keywords

Related Articles

The Effects of Provincial and Individual Religiosity on Deviance in China: A Multilevel Modeling Test of the Moral Community Thesis

This paper examines the moral community thesis in the secular context of China. Using multilevel logistic regression, we test (1) whether both individual- (measured by affiliation with Islam, Buddhism and Christianity)...

Auguste Comte and Consensus Formation in American Religious Thought—Part 2: Twilight of New England Comtism

Auguste Comte was the most influential sociologist and philosopher of science in the Nineteenth Century. Part 1 summarized his works and analyzed reactions to them by Transcendentalists and Unitarians from 1837 until j...

The Catholic Church and Technological Progress: Past, Present, and Future

Over 2000 years the Catholic Church has slowly developed a posture towards technology which is predominantly techno-optimist and techno-progressive, and yet the Church does not have this reputation today. Concomitantly...

The Crossroads of Plastination and Pilgrimage

At the Singapore Science Centre in 2010, I went to Body Worlds, an exhibit set up by the Institute for Plastination, founded by Gunther von Hagens. As I later learned, he pioneered plastination—the art, science, and te...

Nelson Mandela and the Power of Ubuntu

Nelson Mandela dedicated his life to fighting for the freedom of his South African kin of all colors against the institution of apartheid. He spent twenty-seven years fighting from within prison, only gaining his freed...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP25260
  • DOI https://doi.org/10.3390/rel3030662
  • Views 364
  • Downloads 15

How To Cite

Constantin Fasolt (2012). Saving Renaissance and Reformation: History, Grammar, and Disagreements with the Dead. Religions, 3(3), -. https://europub.co.uk/articles/-A-25260