Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Paolo Sarpi
View through CrossRef
Paolo Sarpi (1552–1623) is remembered as the defender of Venice against the Papal Interdict of 1606 and as the first, and greatest, historian of the Counter-Reformation. The sources of his undoubted hostility to clerical authority have always been a matter of controversy; many contemporaries claimed that Sarpi was an 'atheist', while to others his anticlericalism suggested that he was in secret a Protestant. In the present book David Wootton argues that Sarpi's public opinions must be assessed in the light of the views expressed in his private papers. Starting from the Pensiere, in which Sarpi formulated a series of philosophical and historical arguments against Christianity, Mr Wootton seeks to reinterpret Sarpi's life work as being the expression, not of a love of intellectual liberty, nor of a commitment to Protestantism, but of a carefully thought out hostility to doctrinal religion. This interpretation of Sarpi serves to cast new light on the man and his work. But it also throws new light on the intellectual history of his age. Historians such as Lucien Febvre and R. H. Popkin have sought to deny the existence of systematic unbelief in Sarpi's day. Others, such as Christopher Hill and Carlo Ginzburg, have found evidence of a radical, popular tradition of unbelief. This book seeks, through its account of Sarpi's beliefs, to penetrate the hypocrisy which contemporaries agreed characterised the age, and to lay the foundations for a new understanding of the intellectual origins of unbelief.
Title: Paolo Sarpi
Description:
Paolo Sarpi (1552–1623) is remembered as the defender of Venice against the Papal Interdict of 1606 and as the first, and greatest, historian of the Counter-Reformation.
The sources of his undoubted hostility to clerical authority have always been a matter of controversy; many contemporaries claimed that Sarpi was an 'atheist', while to others his anticlericalism suggested that he was in secret a Protestant.
In the present book David Wootton argues that Sarpi's public opinions must be assessed in the light of the views expressed in his private papers.
Starting from the Pensiere, in which Sarpi formulated a series of philosophical and historical arguments against Christianity, Mr Wootton seeks to reinterpret Sarpi's life work as being the expression, not of a love of intellectual liberty, nor of a commitment to Protestantism, but of a carefully thought out hostility to doctrinal religion.
This interpretation of Sarpi serves to cast new light on the man and his work.
But it also throws new light on the intellectual history of his age.
Historians such as Lucien Febvre and R.
H.
Popkin have sought to deny the existence of systematic unbelief in Sarpi's day.
Others, such as Christopher Hill and Carlo Ginzburg, have found evidence of a radical, popular tradition of unbelief.
This book seeks, through its account of Sarpi's beliefs, to penetrate the hypocrisy which contemporaries agreed characterised the age, and to lay the foundations for a new understanding of the intellectual origins of unbelief.
Related Results
Paolo Sarpi, William Bedell, and the First Italian Translation of the Book of Common Prayer
Paolo Sarpi, William Bedell, and the First Italian Translation of the Book of Common Prayer
The first Italian translation of the Book of Common Prayer was made in 1608 by William Bedell (the chaplain to James I’s ambassador in Venice) with the help of Fulgenzio Micanzio a...
Il pensiero in azione: Paolo Sarpi oltre l’Interdetto
Il pensiero in azione: Paolo Sarpi oltre l’Interdetto
Paolo Sarpi, having passed the age of fifty, took the opportunity of the Interdict dispute to step out of his conventual world and become the promoter of a fight against the yoke t...
Paolo Veronese
Paolo Veronese
Paolo Veronese was born in 1528 in Verona and died on 19 April 1588 in Venice. He was active as a painter from 1546 until his unexpected death at the height of his career in 1588. ...
La Segreteria di Stato nelle riforme di Paolo VI e Giovanni Paolo II
La Segreteria di Stato nelle riforme di Paolo VI e Giovanni Paolo II
Romeo Astorri, La Segreteria di Stato nette riforme di Paolo VI e di Giovanni Paolo II, p. 501-518.
La riforma della Segreteria di Stato trova nella riforma generale del...
Current state-of-the-art of adrenal surgery in Italy: the cancer risk in surgical adrenal lesions (CRISAL) survey
Current state-of-the-art of adrenal surgery in Italy: the cancer risk in surgical adrenal lesions (CRISAL) survey
Abstract
Adrenalectomies are growing worldwide because of the frequent diagnosis of incidentaloma and the use of minimally invasive surgery (MIS). The factors used to ide...
Carlo Cipolla, Amedeo Crivellucci e l’edizione della Historia Langobardorum di Paolo Diacono
Carlo Cipolla, Amedeo Crivellucci e l’edizione della Historia Langobardorum di Paolo Diacono
During the congress on Paolo Diacono held in Cividale del Friuli in 1899 (eleven centuries after Paolo's death) a scientific committee decided to publish a new edition of Paolo’s o...
Motivi letterari nei libri per l’infanzia di Paolo Di Paolo
Motivi letterari nei libri per l’infanzia di Paolo Di Paolo
Literary Themes in the Children’s Books of Paolo Di Paolo...
The First Italian Edition of the Book of Common Prayer (1685)
The First Italian Edition of the Book of Common Prayer (1685)
In 1685 the first printed edition in Italian of the Anglican Book of Common Prayer was published in London: Il Libro delle Preghiere Publiche secondo l’uso della Chiesa Anglicana. ...

