Cognitive Revolution

#108: Humanism and the conversation of the ages (feat. Sarah Bakewell)

Nov 14, 2023
Sarah Bakewell, author and historian of ideas known for accessible intellectual biographies, discusses humanism across seven centuries. She explores humanism’s view of meaning in social and ecological connections. Conversations range from Montaigne’s ‘‘nothing human is foreign’’ to Ubuntu and rebuilding mutuality after injustice. She reflects on surprising humanist figures and why engaging past thinkers fuels hope for the future.
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INSIGHT

Meaning Comes From Our Social Web

  • Humanism finds meaning in our social web rather than divine authority.
  • Sarah Bakewell highlights Ubuntu and Montaigne to show meaning arises from connections with other people and living things, not supernatural observers.
INSIGHT

Universality And Diversity Go Together

  • Montaigne reconciles universality and diversity as complementary humanist principles.
  • Bakewell notes Montaigne prized both the belief in shared human essence and a ‘ruling principle’ of fascination with human diversity.
ANECDOTE

Valla Used Linguistic Forensics To Debunk Authority

  • Lorenzo Valla exposed the Donation of Constantine as a medieval forgery through linguistic forensics.
  • Bakewell recounts Valla analyzing Latin usage to date the text centuries later and challenge church authority.
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