MainSocietyPhilosophyReference › Dante Alighieri

Dante Alighieri

Edit Page
Report
Scan day: 07 February 2014 UTC
-301
Virus safety - good
Description: Life and work of 13th century Italian poet and philosopher; by Winthrop Wetherbee.
Dante Alighieri (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy) First published Mon Jan 29, 2001; substantive revision Mon Jan 6, 2014 Dante's engagement with philosophy cannot be studied apart from his vocation as a writer, in which he sought to raise the level of public discourse by educating his countrymen and inspiring them to pursue happiness in the contemplative life. He was one of the most learned Italian laymen of his day, intimately familiar with Aristotelian logic and natural philosophy, theology (he had a special affinity for the thought of Albert the Great and Thomas Aquinas), and classical literature. His writings reflect this in their mingling of philosophical and theological language, invoking Aristotle and the neo-Platonists side by side with the poet of the psalms. Like Aquinas, Dante wished to summon his audience to the practice of philosophical wisdom, though by means of truths embedded in his own poetry, rather than mysteriously embodied in scripture.
Size: 980 chars

Contact Information

Phone&Fax:
Address:
Extended:

WEBSITE Info

Page title:Dante Alighieri (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)
Keywords:
Description:
IP-address:171.67.193.20

WHOIS Info

NS
Name Servers: ARGUS.STANFORD.EDU 171.64.7.115, 2607:f6d0:0:9113::ab40:773 AVALLONE.STANFORD.EDU 171.64.7.88, 2607:f6d0:0:9116::ab40:758
WHOIS
Date
activated: 04-Oct-1985
last updated: 07-May-2009
expires: 31-Jul-2014