Mariano Fazio2026-03-222026-03-222006http://revistas.um.edu.uy/index.php/revistahumanidades/article/view/109https://andeanlibrary.org/handle/123456789/54979Citaciones: 2For many years scholars have tended to divide the history of western thought into a deeply Christian Middle Ages and, by opposition, a singulary secularized Modrnity. Although Modernity tended to close itself to transcendence, at the same time it exhibited the need for a vision which did not end in a merely earhly existence. A reflection of this conception are the so-called secularized eschatologies or absolutizations of the relative. There was also an open Modernity, which "faced" transcendence; it is this current of thought which inspires an immanent transcendece, an unfailing guide and presenter of the hope required to negotiate the desert spaces suggested by the culture of contemporaneity.esModernityHumanitiesSecularizationTranscendence (philosophy)PhilosophyArtArt historyIdas y vueltas de la trascendencia en la Modernidadarticle