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09-06-2007, 03:43 PM | #241 |
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Dissection and the church
I brought up the question of dissection on the "Did the Church hold back medical advance" thread, but they're focusing on hospitals instead, so I'll re-ask here.
In the (admittedly fictional) book "The Agony and the Ecstasy" Michelangelo has to get access to corpses in an illegal fashion. Likewise, Michelangelo assumed that Leonardo da Vinci must have done the same because his works were also anatomically accurate. This was because the Church had banned dissection (at least in Florence), except for once a year under special observation. The posts above seem to indicate that Leonardo got some sort of special permission for dissection. However, since this topic is about the Middle Ages rather than the Renaissance, my questions are: Was the dissection ban purely fiction? Was dissection illegal before that point? Did the Church care enough to make it illegal? The understanding of anatomy is essential to realistic depiction of the human form. Even if we cannot determine whether it was legal/illegal, we can certainly say that artists were dissecting (or taking advantage of anatomical studies) during the Renaissance. The fact that art before this time was generally not realistic seems to imply that anatomical knowledge was not very well known. Can any art historians cite examples of realistic art from earlier periods which would indicate people were dissecting? |
09-06-2007, 03:48 PM | #242 | ||
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09-06-2007, 04:11 PM | #243 | ||||
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I don't know enough about the history of Florence in that particular period to comment for certain, but I usually find novels to be very poor sources of accurate historical information.
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And not all Medieval art was "unrealistic" anyway. Look at these Thirteenth Century sculptures from Naumburg, for example. |
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09-06-2007, 04:38 PM | #244 | |||
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Praise the lord and pass the ammunition! |
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09-06-2007, 06:21 PM | #245 | ||
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09-06-2007, 07:06 PM | #246 | ||
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http://www.utexas.edu/cola/depts/phi...9/349lec13.htm Quote:
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09-07-2007, 02:00 AM | #247 |
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I tried reading some of Aquinas' Summa, expecting to find some great wisdom and interesting philosophy. However, I was just appalled by his naive treatment of the Bible itself, and I couldn't get past the way he would just put out a Bible verse, completely out of context, as some sort of universal truth -- much like a fundamentalist preacher in modern times.
So I gave up on reading him. Obviously, some great scholars have spent much of their careers studying Aquinas, but to a philistine like me he's hopeless. Am I missing some great stuff here? Ray |
09-07-2007, 07:53 AM | #248 | |
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09-07-2007, 08:34 AM | #249 | ||
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After the pope saw that Leonardo was dweedling around with the paints and never got down to painting, Leonardo was dismissed with the remark that this young man will never get anywhere in painting. (When he was under contract to paint a "last supper" for the dining hall of a religious Order, he drove the monks insane for never finishing his job. Occasionally he went to look at what he had painted, put a dab of paint here and there, and just went home. The face of Christ is incomplete. He never painted the eyebrows of the Mona Lisa either. When he applied for a job in Milan, his resume` was about himself as an engineer.) That's Leonardo! His use of oil paint for murals, instead of the traditional fresco procedure, resulted in the total deterioration of the "Battle of Anghiari", of which we have only copies made by some foreign artists, and some traces on the wall. The "Last Supper" fared better, but it had to be massively restored recently, before falling apart; it even survived the WWII bombing of the dining-hall in which it is. |
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09-07-2007, 09:35 AM | #250 | |
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The objective of the Scholastic Theologians was to make a synthesis of revealed wisdom (the Scriptures) and human wisdom (mainly traditional philosophy AND, therefore, what nature reveals). So, throughout the Christian High Middle Ages, there is the doctrine of the TWO BOOKS for the knowledge of God: The Sacred Scriptures and Nature. Needless to say, the medieval man LEARNS from these Two Books; he is not a searcher/investigator and writer of any book. The modern evangelists and kindred theologians make their own Christian Doctrines and use the Scriptures at their own discretion. They have even invented or emphasized the idea (contrary to the Bible's text) that the Commandments were laws God gave mankind, and that the miracles God performed for the Bible People are prospective miracles for anyone who becomes a believer in the Bible (or the Two Testaments). They take blatant anti-historical positions in order to successfully sell their merchandise (religion) to the general population. |
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