|
Part Four. The Modern World
|
|
1. The Order of Power: Machiavelli
|
31
|
|
§1. Biographical--Machiavelli and Guicciardini
|
32
|
|
§2. The Problems of the Age--The Trauma of 1494
|
34
|
|
§3. The Italian Tradition
|
38
|
|
a. Cardinal Albornoz
|
|
b. Coluccio Salutati
|
|
c. Humanistic Historiography
|
|
§4. The Asiatic Background
|
42
|
|
a. The Shadow of Asia
|
|
b. Poggio Bracciolini
|
|
c. The
Vita Tamerlani
|
|
d. Conclusion
|
|
§5.
The Vita di Castruccio Castracani
|
55
|
|
§6. The
Discorsi
|
59
|
|
§7. The
Principe
|
72
|
|
§8. Conclusion
|
82
|
|
2. The Order of Reason: Erasmus and More
|
88
|
|
§1. The Year 1516
|
89
|
|
§2. The Christianity of Erasmus
|
91
|
|
§3. The Ascetic Prince and the
Vulgus
|
97
|
|
§4. The Range of Princely Asceticism
|
101
|
|
§5. Erasmus on War
|
104
|
|
§6. The Problem of Power
|
105
|
|
§7.
Utopia
and America
|
109
|
|
§8. Somewhere and Nowhere
|
113
|
|
§9. Pride and Property
|
119
|
|
§10. Utopian Warfare
|
125
|
|
3. The People of God
|
131
|
|
§1. Institution and Movement
|
131
|
|
§2. Periodization of the Movement
|
136
|
|
§3. The Range of the Movement
|
138
|
|
§4. Church and Sect
|
140
|
|
§5. Reform and Anticivilizational Effects
|
143
|
|
§6.
A Glimpse of Sion's Glory
|
145
|
|
§7. The Social Structure of the Movement
|
148
|
|
§8. Eastern Influences on the Western Movement--Dionysius
Areopagita
|
151
|
|
§9. The Ideas of the Movements
|
157
|
|
a. The Albigensians
|
|
b. Erigena
|
|
c. The Two Worlds
|
|
d. A Sermon by Thomas Collier
|
|
e. The
Queries
to Lord Fairfax
|
|
f. Activism and Nihilism
|
|
§10. The Free Spirit
|
177
|
|
a. State of the Problem
|
|
b. The Ortliebians
|
|
c. Beguinism—Eckhart
|
|
d. The
Ninth Rock
—Stupor and Outburst
|
|
e. The Paracletes
|
|
f. Hieronymus Bosch
|
|
§11. Apollonian
Imperium
|
201
|
|
a. Burdach's Conception of the Renaissance
|
|
b. Boniface VIII—The
Homo Spiritualis
|
|
c. Dante—Intellect and Grace
|
|
d. Conclusion
|
|
Part Five. The Great Confusion
|
|
1. The Great Confusion I: Luther and Calvin
|
217
|
|
§1. Press and Public
|
218
|
|
§2. The Schism--The Disputation of Leipzig
|
220
|
|
§3. The Historicity of Symbols--Church and Transubstantiation
|
223
|
|
§4. The Ninety-Five Theses
|
228
|
|
§5. The
Address to the Christian Nobility of the German Nation
|
231
|
|
§6. Justification through Faith
|
248
|
|
§7. Afterthoughts
|
260
|
|
§8. Calvin and Predestination
|
268
|