De Docta Ignorantia

De docta ignorantia (Latin: On learned ignorance/on Scientific Ignorance) is a book on philosophy and theology by Nicholas of Cusa (or Nicolaus Cusanus), who finished writing it on 12 February 1440 in his mother-town of Kues, Germany.

Earlier scholars had discussed the matter, e.g.

For Cusanus, the docta ignorantia means a »visio sine comprehensione, speculatio« (De docta ignor. I, 26). As mankind can not grasp the infinity of a deity through rational knowledge, the limits of science need to be passed by means of speculation that blur the borders between science and ignorantia. In other words both reason and a supra-rational understanding is needed to understand God. This leads to the idea coincidentia oppositorum, a Union of Opposites, a doctrine common in mystic beliefs from the Middle Ages. These ideas influenced other contemporary Renaissance scholars such as Pico della Mirandola.

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