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In 1486, Pico della Mirandola declared that human beings have no fixed nature and can fashion themselves into whatever they choose. This video traces how that single radical idea cascaded through five thinkers — Pico, Machiavelli, Bacon, Hobbes, and Locke — to produce the scientific revolution, natural rights, and constitutional democracy. You will see how each thinker extended the logic of unlimited human will to a new domain: Pico aimed it at the self, Machiavelli at Fortune, Bacon at nature, and Hobbes and Locke at political order. By 1689, the philosophical foundations of the modern world were in place — along with a tension that remains unresolved. Key concepts covered: • The three pillars of Greek humanism — reason (logos), moderation (sophrosyne), and community (polis) — and why the Renaissance broke with all three • Pico della Mirandola's Oration on the Dignity of Man (1486) and the shift from reason to will as the defining human faculty • How Machiavelli rebranded Greek hubris as virtù — bold, decisive action rather than arrogance inviting punishment • Francis Bacon's redirection of reason from contemplation to mastery of nature, laying the philosophical foundation for the scientific revolution and the concept of progress • Hobbes's state of nature, the social contract, and the revolutionary claim that natural rights exist before government • Locke's refinement: life, liberty, and property as inviolable rights, and the right of revolution when government fails to protect them • The critical difference between Greek freedom (participation in the community) and modern freedom (protection of the individual from the state) • How this intellectual chain drove real political revolutions — the English Civil War, the Glorious Revolution, the American Revolution, and the French Revolution • The unresolved tension: unlimited will without moral guardrails carries its own dangers ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ SOURCE MATERIALS The source materials for this video are from • 1. Introduction