Humanism as a Threat and Hope for 17th Century England

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The renaissance lay dormant in the minds of men from the 13th and 14th centuries. Their work was considered heretical and they were burned at the stake. The repression of the 13th and 14th centuries was undone as the power of the church and its scholastic knowledge was transferred to any literate men with access to a local printer's workshop and money to buy a library of ancient works that were now being copied at incredible speeds. This created a threat to the doctrinal power of the church which gave way to a scientific revolution. The new power of scientific knowledge and the engines that it was to build was a subject of two of the greatest playwrights of the period, Christopher Marlowe and William Shakespeare. Marlowe identified the perceived threats that came from irreverence of the church and tradition. Shakespeare wrote a play that focused on the great promise that the renaissance turned out to be. Many in power feared that the promise of returning to old ideas was actually a demonic illusion of prosperity which undermined traditional doctrine. Others enjoyed the thought of the new power that might be enjoyed from conquering distant lands and using the old books as tools to master earth.

In Dr. Faustus, Marlowe's main character is intelligent in that he can absorb and use the knowledge from books but is ignorant of whether the ideas are good or evil. To Dr. Faustus, scripture, Aristotlian logic, and books on magic and necromancy are the same. They are all a means to power over the material world. This is an example of the kind of irreverence for Christian orthodoxy which drove censorship of all ideas that were not doctrine. It was feared that old ideas were heathen ideas by their very nature. According to Mephistophele...

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...f gaining power, namely noble birth.

Shakespeare's characters enjoyed the traditional European methods of gaining power. Prospero restores his birthright through Ariel. The King of Naples is saved by Ariel, after Antonio hatches a plot to kill the King and put Sebastian in power. Spirit's exist as a force of nature to be commanded by the same political power structure that already existed.

The second problem that Shakespeare's contemporaries grappled with was that of indigenous Peoples. Shakespeare presents Caliban as initially curious, ignorant, and eventually indecent and untrustworthy. Caliban despises Prospero, who until recently had made an effort to educate and care for Caliban. Prospero is superior to Caliban in every way. The classification of indigenous people as lazy savages would be ongoing justification for putting their lands to European use.

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