Prof. Mezger started his lecture with the motto of Freiburg's medieval
Collegium Sapientiae:
"The beginning of wisdom is the fear of the Lord." This verse from Psalm 111.10 and the spolia is all that remains of the former student burse.
Furthermore, we read in Proverbs 10:14, "Wise men lay up knowledge: but the mouth of the foolish is near destruction," and, even stronger, in Proverbs 1:7, "Fools despise wisdom and instruction."
To make his point, Prof. Mezger inverted the Collegium's motto to
Initium insipientitiae contemptus: "The beginning of folly is contempt
for God."
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| Dixit insipiens in corde suo: non est Deus |
It must have been a sensual fool that misguided King David, for as is said in Proverbs 10:23: "It is as sport to a fool to do mischief."
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| A fool in traditional costume (yellow and red) with his face reflected in his marotte. |
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| Around 1540, woodcut by Heinrich Vogtherr the Younger |
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Around 1540, woodcut by
Heinrich Vogtherr the Younger |
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The work by Erasmus of Rotterdam, which he recently revised himself,
is available for purchase at the Ascensius printing shop |
The personified Folly Moria* lectures its followers.
*A pun on the name of
Thomas More
to whom Erasmus dedicated his book.
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| Of the Great Lutheran Fool, as Described by Dr. Murner |
The clergy still generates the greatest fools ...
... but the greatest folly of all was the bite into the apple which ...
... as is well known, led to the mortality of men and women.
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| Death as a fool |
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| Omnem in homine venustatem mors abolet |
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The Mother of Fools and Her Seven Sons https://www.schlossambras-innsbruck.at/object/90962 |
Let the "Mappa Mundi of the Fool," created in the Paris workshop of
Jean de Gourmont
in the late 15th century, serve as a reminder: "The number of fools is
infinite."
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| Stultorum infinitus est numerus |
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