In defense of the Renaissance Man
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Is it possible for one to be both scholar and artist? Simultaneously "right-brained, and 'left-brained" and capable at both?
Part of the problem with our contemporary culture of "experts" is that it doesn't allow for the real possibility that a man or woman can effectively operate out of both sides of their brain, or demonstrate expertise in both the arts and the intellect. Going to our General Practitioner won't do -- we are referred to a 'specialist.' There's simply too much to know for any one person to know it all.
As I've wrestled with my own calling, the idea that a person who is a jack-of-all-trades can only be 'master of none' has forced me into an artificial narrowness: "If I am a writer, then people won't possibly believe that I am also an artist and musician." (Or at least, not very good at either; because how could any one person possibly be skilled at both.)
What would Leonardo DaVinci have thought of this constricted vision of human calling? His own brilliance covered such sweeping pursuits as painting, architecture, the anatomy of the human body, and even the design of tanks and advanced weaponary. The man who painted the "Last Supper" also excelled in geometry and architecture.
Yet, perhaps our culture of experts has sabotaged the Renaissance Man with narrow and constricting assumptions.
One the one hand, it is good for a person to be as clear and specific about their calling as they can be. On the other, there may be a common thread running underneath the various pursuits of the Renaissance Man or Woman. In my case, it was the thread of design: whether I am composing a music score for a video, or writing another chapter of my next book, I deeply enjoy creating and revealing design -- whether it's the design of a musical composition, or the design of the human heart and its longings. The intellect and the artistry are not mutually-exclusive, but mutually-affirming.
So take heart, those of you who, like DaVinci have found yourself competent in both the intellect and scholarly as well as the poetic and sublime. There is precident for what you can offer the world.
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