Early Modern · 1600s
The Baroque
“Is life real, or just a dream?”
The 1600s were an age of dramatic contrasts. People felt torn between ‘seize the day’ and ‘remember you will die.’ In grand art and in plays like Shakespeare's, thinkers wondered whether the world we experience is solid and real, or fleeting ‘such stuff as dreams are made on.’
“We are such stuff as dreams are made on, and our little life is rounded with a sleep.”
The big idea
Baroque thinkers wrestled with the gap between appearance and reality, and between two views of the world: idealism (reality is ultimately mind or spirit) and materialism (reality is ultimately physical stuff). The era set the stage for Descartes' great question — how do we know any of this is real?
What they changed
It gave us some of history's greatest art, music, and theater (Bach, Shakespeare, Rembrandt), and its obsession with ‘what is truly real?’ launched modern philosophy of mind and knowledge.
The controversy
Was the universe a giant machine following fixed laws (as the new science suggested), or a living creation full of spirit and meaning? This tension between the mechanical and the meaningful runs through everything that follows.
In their words
- “What is life? A frenzy. What is life? An illusion, a shadow, a fiction.” — Pedro Calderón de la Barca
- “To be, or not to be — that is the question.” — William Shakespeare, Hamlet
✦ A curious detail
The word ‘baroque’ originally meant an oddly-shaped, imperfect pearl — a hint at the era's love of drama and surprise.
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Meet this chapter on the voyage
A curated lecture, a short enquiry, and a wax-seal medallion to acquire — and the next thinker unlocks. No account, no password.
Begin the voyage