n II. To prove the two sides of an argument were in agreement and not contradictory through a series of dialectics. This was done in two ways:7 q) O d- L- U
n i. philoloigical analysis:3 `% O" f& t" S$ l; N T
n Words were examined and it would be argued they could have more than one meaning, that the author could have meant the word to mean something else. Ambiguity in words could be used to find common ground between two otherwise contradictory statements.
, p& Y: \! r6 ~8 N) I' R- c, K n ii. logical analysis:9 D. C [/ C. @; o
n The scholastics relied on the rules of formal logic to show contradictions did not exist, but were subjective to the reader.
3 U7 p; D4 d- G (4) Scholastic school: further reading
: _2 E S0 ?* h% } n Scholastic schools had two methods of teaching:
: U9 d$ Y/ @9 s8 m5 ~0 T6 F; Y n I. the lectio (诵读圣言, 经文评注) . A teacher would read a text, expounding on certain words or ideas, but no questions were allowed. It was a simple reading of a text, the instructors explained, and silence for the students
4 k8 l/ F* H& }0 ^ II. the disputatio (disputation 辩论)0 k( u' d1 m7 f4 \( [6 W" G- q' [
n There were two types of disputatio's:+ j* S# t0 c, Q' n/ [2 R6 P
n i. "ordinary" disputatio (通常的辩论) :7 v5 l+ `9 P3 S. M0 Y8 z* ]
n The question to be disputed was announced beforehand.
" |3 l) x' p: v) T n ii. the quodlibetal (随意性辩论) :; c4 `# }2 A3 Q5 h3 S
n The students would pop the question to the teacher without any prior preparation. The teacher would then have to come up with a response. Such as "Is it ok to steal?" The teacher would then cite from authoritative texts such as the Bible and prove his position. Students would then rebut the response and this would go back and forth often digressing into unruly affairs. During this haphazard exercise someone would be keeping notes on what was said, the teacher would then summarize the arguments from the notes and present his final position the next day answering all the rebuttals in a final answer.7 \, F* i, V# i0 H5 z* ~8 d( Y' n: o
8. Literature: 105
# q! U8 v e* `5 h# O9 j7 H (1) National epics: 1059 S Q6 Y4 O; x' A @
I. Definition of national epic:
5 k# w) |5 e5 A4 ] n The epic written in vernacular languages, namely, the languages of various national states that came into being in the Middle Ages. It was the starting point of a gradual transition of European literature from Latin culture to a culture that was the combination of a variety of national characteristics.
4 y+ j2 a* q S O' I, l+ u/ @ II. Famous national epics:
+ T3 r1 d8 K2 U/ g/ M n i. Beowulf, an Anglo-Saxon epic: 105' X: i, n) J2 n; ?/ @
n ii. Song of Roland, French epic2 Y; w: d1 t! _, ^9 J/ D( u% ]
(2) Dante Alighieri & The Divine Comedy
/ S( Q: a1 w, ~& W- ]+ ~1 B Dante shown holding a copy of The Divine Comedy, next to the entrance to Hell, the seven terraces of Mount Purgatory and the city of Florence, in a fresco.
5 I, i; H" p: ]3 c& t- ] E I. Significance of The Divine Comedy: 118+ A& C, V. G1 i) A! T. M% ~0 j
n Written between 1308 and his death in 1321, The Divine Comedy is widely considered the greatest epic of Latin literature, and one of the greatest of western literature (in parallell with Homeric Epics, Shakespeare’s Hamlet, and Goethe’s Faust). Its influence is so great that it affects the Christian view of the afterlife to this day.$ }: {; @5 U- L; C* a
n While the poem itself is a Christian poem with a profound vision of the medieval Christian world, it also expresses humanistic ideas which foreshadowed the spirit Renaissance.$ i Z5 Z' Q& \% S
II. Structure and story of The Divine Comedy
& i# b- B6 ^5 ^ n The Divine Comedy is composed of three parts:) \3 M4 C, o8 n4 _* @
n Inferno (Hell), Purgatorio (Purgatory), and Paradiso (Paradise)" Q/ b4 e1 H# Y7 r9 _9 ^
n The poet tells in the first person his travel through the three realms of the dead. His guide through Hell and Purgatory is the Latin poet Virgil, author of The Aeneid, and the guide through Paradise is Beatrice, Dante's ideal of a perfect woman.We may say that Virgil and Beatrice respectively represents wisdom and love which are able to lead one to paradise' c$ y& R. V B( k( \" |
The nine circles of Hell:$ I* }$ T6 P; H
n The circles are concentric, each new one representing further and further evil, culminating in the center of the earth, where Satan is held, bound. Each circle's sin is punished in an appropriately revengeful way to fit the crime.4 ` L# z4 `: p5 k% v) z G1 L
n The nine circles of Hell (九圈地狱) :6 w& `2 E& i) @; Y: f
n Circle 1. Limbo:2 x g* w- n$ A
n The unbaptized and virtuous pagans, who, though not sinful, did not accept Christ, namely, such poets, pilosophers and scientists in ancient Greece and Rome as Homer, Plato and Aristotle. They are not punished in an active sense, but are merely unable to reach Heaven and denied God's presence for eternity. |