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Thursday, February 7, 2019

Milton and Cavendish: Faithful Realists :: Paradise lost Blazing World

Milton and Cavendish congregation RealistsInquiries regarding the nature and acquisition of knowledge, coupled with the monumental question of whether benignant beings are capable of accruing knowledgethe philosophical study of epistemologyhas roots buried in antiquity Genesis, to be exact. Great thinkers of the Western tradition have twain accepted and rejected components of Old Testament lore Platonic and Aristotelian philosophers have indeed battled for centuries over the way in which reality is understood. following(a) Aristotles teachings, the empiricists and Enlightenment thinkers regarded the processing of sense and experiential data as the surest way to unlock truth. Platos adherents, however, figures such as Immanuel Kant, deemed the human sense a leaky and misguiding faculty, not quite efficient in comprehending truth. fast one Milton and Margaret Cavendish, the reigning theological epistemologists of the 17th century, pondered the nature of divine reality, the rol e of human rationality in understanding Gods master plan, and the way of life by which that plan is (and should be) grasped by the human race. Both Milton and Cavendish have declare in their works, Paradise Lost and The Blazing World, that causal agent as a means to arrive at ultimate truth is insufficient in the end, faith is the only tool with which human beings acquire proper knowledge. subsequently an initial reading of The Blazing World, one would assume Cavendish ranked reason above faith, parting ways with Milton the Empress in the tale is nearly obsess with scientific inquiry. Upon close analysis of the text, however, it becomes evident that Cavendishs message is complemental to Miltons. This is not to say that either Milton or Cavendish were pure theologians in their creation view, placing no value on apprehension or logic rather, both found a measure of importance in the findings of contemporary science and consequently instilled in their literary protagonists curiosity about the laws of the universe. It was just such cosmic curiosity that plagued thinking individuals of the Renaissance period. As Europe slowly developed a flavor for scientific inquiry, well guarded theological dogmas were threatened the mid 1600s was indeed a time of questioning broad established religious and political doctrines. While grappling with the emerging palisade of reason versus faith, Milton and Cavendish offered philosophical fictions heralding the supremacy of the latter. Characters in the authors works discover that reason, brittle by belief in divine truth, is dangerous. Cavendishs Empress of the Blazing World, for example, is a tyrannical ruler who demands that her subjects uncover the secrets of the natural world.

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