
- 130 pages
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
In times of conflicts and crises, an argument insisting on the humane is commonly heard. In wars, voices demanding a humane treatment of prisoners – as decreed by the Geneva Convention – will be raised. Opposition to social injustice may be framed in a collected call for a humane society. Even educational systems may insist on having a humane perspective among its leading causes. Words referring to man – humane, but also humanistic, humanitarian, even humanity – thus take on status of ideals for mankind. Man, in common and legal speech, thus becomes the conceptual marker of his own perfection. The subject of this book is the early history of this linguistic feature and in particular its argumentative use, from its starting point till early modern times.
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Information
Table of contents
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Table of Contents
- Body
- Foreword
- Introduction
- Chapter 1: The Humane as Argument
- Chapter 2: The Humanitas of Cicero
- Chapter 3: Implementing Humanitas
- Chapter 4: Christianizing Humanitas
- Chapter 5: Humanitas as Argument Against War
- Epilogue: Ancient Humanitas after Erasmus
- Bibliography
- Abbreviations of ancient, Greek-Roman sources
- Index