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In our Image and Likeness: Humanity and Divinity in Italian Humanist Thought

315

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1969

Year

Abstract

The most impressive aspect of Professor Trinkaus' work is the dexterity and the keenly in- telligent sagacity with which a tremendous mass of material has been interpreted with great insight, controlled, and co-ordinated in an extremely logical conspectus within a conveniently graspable, though complexly ramified, conceptual frame.The next feature which stands out (and even a fugitive glance at the bibliography, at the apparatus of footnotes and references, will bring the matter home to the reader) is the rare pertinacity with which the author has coped with his back-breaking assignment, over a period of several years, in direct, first-hand contact with a bewildering multiplicity of humanistic documents, geographically scattered in the major and minor libraries of Europe (see the Index of the manuscripts consulted, II, 913-916.This Index constitutes a sort of iter bumanisticum of preeminent usefulness to present and future scholars).A third feature of the volumes under review is the fidélité à soi-même, the allegiance to intellectual "form," which the volumes reveal when set side by side with cognate previous productions of Professor Trinkaus.I am referring to his Adversity's Noblemen and to A Humanist's Image of Humanism, books in which the ethical and religious aspects of the humanistic movement occupy, as they do in the present two volumes, an orientational and predominant position.The two keys to the nature and purpose of this opus are to be found in the Foreword to vol.I, and in the last chapter of vol.II, which bears the title "Unity and Plurality in the Hu- manist Visions of Man and God -an Appraisal."Essentially, Charles Trinkaus has written a history of Christian Humanism in terms of its central metaphor, i.e., the deiformitas, the dignity of Man (and in terms of its obverse).Trinkaus is principally concerned with the ethical, religious, theological, philosophical aspects of his theme.And while this concern brings his work into proximity with