• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: Leonardo da Vinci Our Contemporary?
  • Contributor: Witoszek, Nina
  • imprint: Brill, 2014
  • Published in: Worldviews
  • Language: Not determined
  • DOI: 10.1163/15685357-01802002
  • ISSN: 1363-5247; 1568-5357
  • Keywords: Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ; Philosophy ; Religious studies ; Geography, Planning and Development
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: <jats:p>This essay polemicizes with a number of historians who claim that the European Renaissance has either “failed” or “continues to recede from us at an accelerating rate” (Burke 1998: 41; Barzun 2000; Bouswma 2002). I explore and revalue the ideas and representations of Renaissance humanism and the way they become manifest in the work of Leonardo da Vinci. I argue three main points: Firstly, that there is a fascinating, and much underestimated, ecological strain in Leonardo’s opus, a view of relationship between humans and nature, which has a bearing on a paradigm shift required by the current environmental and social crisis. Secondly, in the project of re-imagining a sustainable future, there is much to learn from the way in which a small and subversive community of Renaissance <jats:italic>umanisti</jats:italic> managed—against all odds—to forge a ground-breaking ethical vision which became the foundation of Western modernity. Finally, both Leonardo’s legacy and a reinvention of humanity and nature in the ideas of the Renaissance writers and thinkers, draw attention to a unique code of “eco-humanism”—a value platform emphasizing human dignity, nature’s autonomy and authority, the importance of free inquiry and dialogue, as well as the codex of limitations to human pursuits.</jats:p>