Werner Jaeger (1888–1961) was an outstanding German-American classicist, whose ideas shaped the modern understanding of Antiquity and its role in Western civilization. His central concept – the idea of "the third humanism" or "the third Renaissance" – was not just an academic theory but a response to the profound cultural crisis of Europe in the 20th century.
Jaeger began his career in Germany, becoming a professor at Basel at the age of 25. He witnessed the catastrophe of World War I, the decline of the humanities, and the rise of totalitarian ideologies that offered false, militaristic "ideals." In his seminal three-volume work "Paideia. The Formation of Ancient Greece" (1934–1947), he formulated an answer. For Jaeger, "paideia" is not just education but the process of forming a complete human personality, a cultural ideal based on the harmony of spirit and body. Ancient Greece, in his opinion, created the only complete model of such education in history.
According to Jaeger, Western civilization has experienced three great turns to the ancient heritage:
The First Renaissance (Renaissance XIV–XVI centuries) – was an artistic-aesthetic one. It opened Antiquity as a source of beauty, inspiration in art, literature, and architecture. Its symbols are Michelangelo's statues, Petrarch's poetry, and ideals of harmony.
The Second Renaissance (neohumanism XVIII–XIX centuries) – was a scientific-philological one. Its driving force was German classical philology (Winckelmann, Wolf, von Humboldt), which turned the study of Antiquity into a rigorous science. However, as Jaeger believed, it often reduced Antiquity to a collection of texts and artifacts, losing touch with its ethical passion.
The Third Renaissance (20th century and beyond) – should become ethical-pedagogical. This is Jaeger's main thesis. He called for not just studying Greek authors but to rediscover in them a living system of spiritual and moral values capable of becoming an antidote to the barbarism of modernity. The goal is not archaeological reconstruction but creative assimilation of the "Greek spirit": the ideals of reason, justice, kalokagathia (the unity of goodness and beauty), and the citizen's responsibility.
Jaeger saw Greek classics (from Homer and Sophocles to Plato and Aristotle) as a universal school of humanity. An interesting fact: in the midst of World War II, already in exile in the United States, he publishes the second volume of "Paideia," dedicated to Socrates and Plato. For him, Socrates' struggle with sophistry, the defense of absolute ethical norms, were a direct lesson for an era where truth had become relative.
Jaeger insisted that Greek culture is not a set of dead dogmas but a dynamic process of educating the individual through poetry, philosophy, rhetoric, and politics. His ideas laid the foundation for the reform of classical education in the United States, where the focus shifted from grammatical analysis of texts to their cultural and philosophical content. The key example was the teaching of "Great Books," where Plato's dialogues are read as contemporary treatises on justice and the state.
Jaeger, undoubtedly, idealized Greece, creating a holistic, partly utopian image of it, ignoring its contradictions and "dark" sides. His concept was criticized for its "normativity" and excessive faith in the pedagogical power of the classics. However, the strength of his project lies in the posing of a global question: can the legacy of the past become the foundation for spiritual renewal in the face of civilization's rift?
Werner Jaeger proposed not a historical theory but a humanist manifesto. In an era when humanity is once again facing the challenges of totalitarianism, technological dehumanization, and value relativism, his idea of the third Renaissance gains new relevance. It reminds us that turning to the classics is not a retreat into the past but a search for a solid ethical foundation for the future. Jaeger's Third Humanism is a call to see Antiquity not as a museum exhibit but as a living school of paideia capable of forming a person worthy of his complex era.
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