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The Philosophy
of Nicholas of Cusa

TABLE OF CONTENTS
Background: The New Consideration of
Nature
The Renaissance, as an age of transition, was not conducive to
the building of great philosophical systems. It contained, in
germinal form, the directive ideas of modern times, but under the
guise of the past. Thinkers preferred to write in ancient Latin, and
the style of their writing is also archaic. Under this external
aspect, which smacks of antiquity, are hidden the signs of the next
age.
The greatest representatives of thought, in the order of time,
are Nicholas of Cusa, Telesio, Bruno, and Campanella;
the most important is Bruno. In the thought of all these men there
is a new view of nature, in which nature is considered immanently,
according to the forces inherent in it, and is accessible to
experience and reason. These forces are considered as living ones,
vital spirits, demons; everything is animate; the physical world has
a soul.
It is necessary to investigate these animate forces, for it is on
the basis of their activity that all events can be explained. It is
because of this desire to bring into subjection the occult forces of
nature that during the Renaissance we find so widely diffused the
science of "magic," which professes to know the good and evil
spirits of nature, and to make them allies in good and evil
enterprises.
Also characteristic are alchemy, with its objective of
discovering the philosophical stone which can change everything into
gold; and medicine, with its hope of finding the panacea of evil by
uncovering the common animating force of the universe. This is a
charlatan school, to be sure, but it indicates the tendency of some
of the chief exponents of the age to explain nature through the
forces imbedded in it.
Hence we see Neo-Platonic tendencies, and the Neo-Platonic
thinkers mentioned above. Although Neo-Platonism, logically
developed, leads to pantheism, the thinkers of the Renaissance, with
the exception of Bruno, are not pantheists. Without any logical
foundation they still affirm transcendency, but this more from faith
than from conviction.
Now to the Philosophy of Nicholas of
Cusa
I. Life and
Works
Nicholas Cryfts, called Nicholas of Cusa (picture) from the
name of his native city, was born in 1401. German by birth, he was
Italian in his spiritual and cultural formation. Before going to
Padua for the study of law, mathematics and astronomy, he had come
under the influence of the mysticism of Master Eckhart. Ordained a
Catholic priest, he took part in all the religious controversies of
the time, and worked especially with the Council of Florence, which,
it was hoped, would lead to the union of the churches.
He was made Cardinal and Bishop of Bressanone. His favorite
authors were St. Augustine, Pseudo-Dionysius, Scotus Erigena, St.
Bonaventure, and other Neo-Platonists. A man of severe habits, he
died at Todi in 1464. His principal work is De docta
ignorantia (On Scientific Ignorance); notable also are his De
conjecturis (On Conjectures); and De ludo globi (On the
Game of the World).
Nicholas of Cusa was a Neo-Platonist in thought, and this led him
to formulate a new type of logic and a new interpretation of nature
(metaphysics).
II.
Theory of Knowledge
Human knowledge is a collective and unifying activity; there are
three stages in acquiring this knowledge: phantasy, reason,
intellect.
Phantasy (sense knowledge) has for its scope the unification into
a single representation of the multiple data of the senses.
Reason (meaning abstractive and discursive knowledge) is the
faculty which abstracts universal concepts; it never arrives at
perfect unity. The knowledge of reason, moreover, is deficient
because it represents reality in an improper manner, for it is only
founded on individual beings. Hence it follows that concepts result
from contradictory notes, for instance, unity and multiplicity,
being and non-being. The principle of contradiction, the basis of
Aristotelian Scholastic logic, is good within the limits of reason,
but it gives us an improper knowledge of reality.
We arrive at the knowledge of the reality (God), and hence of
unity and the infinite, only by means of a third activity of the
spirit, the faculty of intellect, which is supra-rational
understanding, mystical intuition. This faculty, overcoming all
differences and multiplicity, presents the reality (God) as perfect
unity, in which all differences are reconciled in the infinite life,
the "coincidence of opposites." The principle of coincidence is for
Nicholas of Cusa a new one on which logic must be based in order to
arrive at the knowledge of reality.
Hence the title of Nicholas' work De Docta ignorantia,
which indicates the limitation of human understanding (reason) as
opposed to the knowledge of God that is free of all such limitation
(supra-rational). Thus the agnosticism of Nicholas of Cusa is
corrected by his fideism, which of course has nothing to do with
philosophy.
III.
Theodicy
God is infinite. The infinity of God leads Nicholas of Cusa to
affirm the coincidence of opposites. Observing how, in a
circumference carried to infinity, the straight and the curved line
coincide, he affirms that in the infinity of God all oppositions are
identified, all distinctions overcome, and all contrariety fades
into nothingness, since the correlative is not to be found. God is
the "implicatio" of all opposites. But what in God is "implicatio"
and "complicatio," becomes "explicatio" in the universe, which
results from multiplicity, distinction, and opposition.
This concept does not differ substantially from the Neo-Platonic
idea. The "explicatio" is equivalent to Platonic emanations, by
virtue of which God, absolute unity, becomes multiple through
subsequent emanations. The concept of Nicholas of Cusa becomes more
dangerous because of the consequences he derives from "explicatio."
The world is an infinite potential, and because of this it
participates in an attribute of divinity. This theory was to be
reaffirmed by Giordano Bruno.
God is as it were contracted in beings; He is the absolute quiddity
of all the things in which He is contracted.
Nicholas of Cusa was the first philosopher to separate himself
from Scholasticism. He began with a logic based on the coincidence
of opposites -- at variance with Aristotelian-Scholastic logic,
which is based on the principle of contradiction. In metaphysics he
was Platonic, and the notion of the transcendence of God was thus
seriously compromised. |