Can the Renaissance be considered a revolution?

Ajax | Respected Posting Frenzy
 
more |
XBL:
PSN: Ajax1234
Steam:
ID: AllAmericanTragedy
IP: Logged

358 posts
 
I actually have no idea... On one hand it's just the Europeans stealing knowledge from other places in the world (or from the past), But on the other hand they started a couple new things... I just don't know


 
Alternative Facts
| Mythic Forum Ninja
 
more |
XBL:
PSN:
Steam:
ID: IcyWind
IP: Logged

9,381 posts
 
In some ways, it is. In other ways, it isn't.

50/50


 
More Than Mortal
| d-d-d-DANK ✡ 🔥🔥🔥 🌈
 
more |
XBL:
PSN:
Steam: MetaCognition
ID: Meta Cognition
IP: Logged

15,060 posts
This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
No.


ΚΑΤΑΝΑΛΩΤΗΣ | Mythic Invincible!
 
more |
XBL:
PSN:
Steam:
ID: TrussingDoor
IP: Logged

7,667 posts
"A time is coming when men will go mad, and when they see someone who is not mad, they will attack him saying, 'You are mad, you are not like us'."
-Saint Anthony the Great
This user has been blacklisted from posting on the forums. Until the blacklist is lifted, all posts made by this user have been hidden and require a Sep7agon® SecondClass Premium Membership to view.
Last Edit: October 02, 2015, 01:01:25 PM by HEAT SEEKING GHOST OF SEX


Winy | Legendary Invincible!
 
more |
XBL: Phasenectar
PSN:
Steam:
ID: Winy
IP: Logged

3,164 posts
 
Is the Enlightenment period not considered an intellectual revolution?


 
DAS B00T x2
| Cultural Appropriator
 
more |
XBL:
PSN:
Steam:
ID: DAS B00T x2
IP: Logged

37,630 posts
This is not the greatest sig in the world, no. This is just a tribute.
It was more Europeans rediscovering lost European and West-Asian ideas, anyway. People love to cite the arabs and turks as the source for all this learning, but it was almost entirely leftover Greek and Roman shit they happened to pick up and translate during their conquests. Europeans just got around to translating it later.
The christian Byzantines were the ones who gave Roman texts (written in ancient Greek, as that was the scholarly language of the Roman elite) to the European powers around the 12th and 13th century translated into more appropriate languages.
Mainland Europe also didn't just stop all scientific advancement from the migration era to the start of the renascence like some people think as well. There was a significant slowing, as many things had to be relearned or re-designed as nobody could read the source material anymore (the literacy of ancient Greek totally died out around 700ad if I'm not remembering wrong, I think I am, but for some reason 700 really just sticks in my mind) and old knowledge had to be re-published and proven again.

Additionally, the term "Dark Ages" isn't meant to imply an evil or regressive time. It was coined because we lack so much original source material from the time. A lot of what's available to us is actually history book like writings from the late medieval and early renascence period.