Oration on the Dignity
of Man
Pico della Mirandola
I once read that Abdala the Muslim, when asked what was most
worthy of awe and wonder in this theater of the world, answered,
"There is nothing to see more wonderful than man!"
Hermes Trismegistus concurs with this opinion: "A great
miracle, Asclepius, is man!" However, when I began to
consider the reasons for these opinions, all these reasons given
for the magnificence of human nature failed to convince me: that
man is the intermediary between creatures, close to the gods,
master of all the lower creatures, with the sharpness of his
senses, the acuity of his reason, and the brilliance of his
intelligence the interpreter of nature, the nodal point between
eternity and time, and, as the Persians say, the intimate bond or
marriage song of the world, just a little lower than angels as
David tells us. I concede these are magnificent reasons, but they
do not seem to go to the heart of the matter, that is, those
reasons which truly claim admiration. For, if these are all the
reasons we can come up with, why should we not admire angels more
than we do ourselves? After thinking a long time, I have figured
out why man is the most fortunate of all creatures and as a
result worthy of the highest admiration and earning his rank on
the chain of being, a rank to be envied not merely by the beasts
but by the stars themselves and by the spiritual natures beyond
and above this world. This miracle goes past faith and wonder.
And why not? It is for this reason that man is rightfully named a
magnificent miracle and a wondrous creation.
What is this rank on the chain of being? God the Father, Supreme
Architect of the Universe, built this home, this universe we see
all around us, a venerable temple of his godhead, through the
sublime laws of his ineffable Mind. The expanse above the heavens
he decorated with Intelligences, the spheres of heaven with
living, eternal souls. The scabrous and dirty lower worlds he
filled with animals of every kind. However, when the work was
finished, the Great Artisan desired that there be some creature
to think on the plan of his great work, and love its infinite
beauty, and stand in awe at its immenseness. Therefore, when all
was finished, as Moses and Timaeus tell us, He began to think
about the creation of man. But he had no Archetype from which to
fashion some new child, nor could he find in his vast
treasure-houses anything which He might give to His new son, nor
did the universe contain a single place from which the whole of
creation might be surveyed. All was perfected, all created things
stood in their proper place, the highest things in the highest
places, the midmost things in the midmost places, and the lowest
things in the lowest places. But God the Father would not fail,
exhausted and defeated, in this last creative act. God's wisdom
would not falter for lack of counsel in this need. God's love
would not permit that he whose duty it was to praise God's
creation should be forced to condemn himself as a creation of
God.
Finally, the Great Artisan mandated that this creature who would
receive nothing proper to himself shall have joint possession of
whatever nature had been given to any other creature. He made man
a creature of indeterminate and indifferent nature, and, placing
him in the middle of the world, said to him "Adam, we give
you no fixed place to live, no form that is peculiar to you, nor
any function that is yours alone. According to your desires and
judgement, you will have and possess whatever place to live,
whatever form, and whatever functions you yourself choose. All
other things have a limited and fixed nature prescribed and
bounded by Our laws. You, with no limit or no bound, may choose
for yourself the limits and bounds of your nature. We have placed
you at the world's center so that you may survey everything else
in the world. We have made you neither of heavenly nor of earthly
stuff, neither mortal nor immortal, so that with free choice and
dignity, you may fashion yourself into whatever form you choose.
To you is granted the power of degrading yourself into the lower
forms of life, the beasts, and to you is granted the power,
contained in your intellect and judgement, to be reborn into the
higher forms, the divine."
Imagine! The great generosity of God! The happiness of man! To
man it is allowed to be whatever he chooses to be! As soon as an
animal is born, it brings out of its mother's womb all that it
will ever possess. Spiritual beings from the beginning become
what they are to be for all eternity. Man, when he entered life,
the Father gave the seeds of every kind and every way of life
possible. Whatever seeds each man sows and cultivates will grow
and bear him their proper fruit. If these seeds are vegetative,
he will be like a plant. If these seeds are sensitive, he will be
like an animal. If these seeds are intellectual, he will be an
angel and the son of God. And if, satisfied with no created
thing, he removes himself to the center of his own unity, his
spiritual soul, united with God, alone in the darkness of God,
who is above all things, he will surpass every created thing. Who
could not help but admire this great shape-shifter? In fact, how
could one admire anything else? . . .
For the mystic philosophy of the Hebrews transforms Enoch into an
angel called "Mal'akh Adonay Shebaoth," and sometimes
transforms other humans into different sorts of divine beings.
The Pythagoreans abuse villainous men by having them reborn as
animals and, according to Empedocles, even plants. Muhammed also
said frequently, "Those who deviate from the heavenly law
become animals." Bark does not make a plant a plant, rather
its senseless and mindless nature does. The hide does not make an
animal an animal, but rather its irrational but sensitive soul.
The spherical form does not make the heavens the heavens, rather
their unchanging order. It is not a lack of body that makes an
angel an angel, rather it is his spiritual intelligence. If you
see a person totally subject to his appetites, crawling miserably
on the ground, you are looking at a plant, not a man. If you see
a person blinded by empty illusions and images, and made soft by
their tender beguilements, completely subject to his senses, you
are looking at an animal, not a man. If you see a philosopher
judging things through his reason, admire and follow him: he is
from heaven, not the earth. If you see a person living in deep
contemplation, unaware of his body and dwelling in the inmost
reaches of his mind, he is neither from heaven or earth, he is
divinity clothed in flesh.
Who would not admire man, who is called by Moses and the Gospels
"all flesh" and "every creature," because he
fashions and transforms himself into any fleshly form and assumes
the character of any creature whatsoever? For this reason,
Euanthes the Persian in his description of Chaldaean theology,
writes that man has no inborn, proper form, but that many things
that humans resemble are outside and foreign to them, from which
arises the Chaldaean saying: "Hanorish tharah sharinas
": "Man is multitudinous, varied, and ever
changing." Why do I emphasize this? Considering that we are
born with this condition, that is, that we can become whatever we
choose to become, we need to understand that we must take earnest
care about this, so that it will never be said to our
disadvantage that we were born to a privileged position but
failed to realize it and became animals and senseless beasts.
Instead, the saying of Asaph the prophet should be said of us,
"You are all angels of the Most High." Above all, we
should not make that freedom of choice God gave us into something
harmful, for it was intended to be to our advantage. Let a holy
ambition enter into our souls; let us not be content with
mediocrity, but rather strive after the highest and expend all
our strength in achieving it.
Let us disdain earthly things, and despise the things of heaven,
and, judging little of what is in the world, fly to the court
beyond the world and next to God. In that court, as the mystic
writings tell us, are the Seraphim, Cherubim, and Thrones 1 in
the foremost places; let us not even yield place to them, the
highest of the angelic orders, and not be content with a lower
place, imitate them in all their glory and dignity. If we choose
to, we will not be second to them in
anything.
Translated from the Latin by Richard Hooker (©1994)