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Informationen zum Autor Harald E. Braun is Lecturer in European History (1300-1700) at the University of Liverpool. His publications include Juan de Mariana SJ (1535-1624) and Early Modern Spanish Political Thought (2007). Edward Vallance is Reader in Early Modern History at London's Roehampton University. His most recent publication is A Radical History of Britain: Visionaries, Rebels and Revolutionaries, the Men and Women Who Fought for Our Freedoms (2009). Klappentext The Renaissance Conscience presents one of the first modern studies to explore the variety of ways in which people during the Renaissance conversed with - and let themselves be guided by - their conscience. Through the careful examination of a wide range of extant sources including theological manuals, legal treatises, letters, and literary and autobiographical texts, the authors illustrate how individuals in England and the Hispanic world during the period of the Renaissance sought to reconcile their private and public selves, and thus establish and protect their identity. Individual essays demonstrate the significance, diversity, and fluidity of notions of conscience in the early modern world. These thought-provoking case studies also reveal how authority figures and commoners from two distinct cultural spheres struggled with similar issues and did so with explicit reference to shared scholastic and humanist traditions - often with similar outcomes. The Renaissance Conscience sheds important new light on the ways in which medieval and Renaissance discourses on conscience impacted upon early modern life and anticipated contemporary notions of moral autonomy. Zusammenfassung The Renaissance Conscience presents one of the first modern studies to explore the variety of ways in which people during the Renaissance conversed with - and let themselves be guided by - their conscience. Inhaltsverzeichnis Notes on contributors ix Introduction ( H arald E. Braun and Edward V allance ) 1 1 Jean Gerson, moral certainty and the Renaissance of ancient Scepticism ( R udolf Schü ssler ) 11 2 Conscience and the law in Thomas More ( B rian C ummings ) 29 3 'Guided By God' beyond the Chilean frontier: the travelling early modern European conscience ( A ndrew R edden ) 52 4 Shakespeare's open consciences ( C hristopher T ilmouth ) 67 5 Women's letters, literature and conscience in sixteenth-century England ( J ames D aybell ) 82 6 The dangers of prudence: salus populi suprema lex, Robert Sanderson, and the 'Case of the Liturgy' ( E dward V allance ) 100 7 The Bible, reason of state, and the royal conscience: Juan Márquez's El governador christiano ( Harald E. B raun ) 118 8 Spin doctor of conscience? The royal confessor and the Christian prince ( N icole R einhardt ) 134 Index 157 ...