Abstract
Cassirer rejects Burckhardt's thesis that there is a radical separation between the theory and practice of the Renaissance, and that Renaissance philosophy is merely a survival of the Middle Ages, containing none of the new tendencies of the period. Nor does he see a sharp break between Renaissance and medieval thought. Instead, Cassirer traces the "close interplay between religion, philosophy, and humanism" in Renaissance thought, and the gradual emergence of a new view of man. Underlying the astonishing variety of philosophies in this period, he uncovers certain common tendencies. Starting with Cusanus, the key transition figure in the shift from medieval patterns of thought, Cassirer traces the rise of new conceptions of knowledge, science, freedom and humanity.--A. F. G.