This paper maintains that, for all his ethical interests, his philosophical and theological essays, political treatises and linguistic studies, Dante was primarily a poet; a poet who, moreover, believed that poetry could change the world, and that the Comedy must be read, first, as a poem. This is not a trivial point, because the Comedy remains a text that is endlessly fascinating to philosophers and theologians as well as moralists who read it for its philosophy, theology and ethics and who sometimes fail to see that a poet’s imagination, even one as egregiously rational as Dante’s, is synthetic rather than analytic. This paper offers an examination of the moral universe of the Comedy, paying particular attention to his presentation of the...
The Comedy soon had a widespread and attracted the admiration of the artists and, in the first place...
I discuss Dante’s understanding that human existence is “ordered by two final goals” and how this un...
The way of reason must yield to the way of the heart. In Dante’s Divine Comedy, the Latin poet Vergi...
The purpose of this thesis is to take a philosophical look at the Divine Comedy of Dante. Since Dant...
This thesis explores the conception and representation of virtu in Dante's Commedia. In order to b...
This dissertation examines Dante’s love for Beatrice, which begins as erotic passion accompanied by ...
As Dante explains in his epistle to Can Grande, the purpose of the Comedy is to move the reader from...
Love and Civitas: Dante’s Ethical Journey in the Vita Nuova Alfred Robert Crudale University of Con...
The paper considers the role of antique philosophy in medieval theology. Dante’s «Divine Comedy» was...
Dante\u27s Commedia derives its form and content from the philosophy of St.Thomas Aquinas. It is a p...
Throughout Dante's work, and especially in the Convivio and in the Monarchia, the interlacing of pol...
The De Vulgari Eloquentia is a study of the vernacular language, its origin and its literary manifes...
I discuss Dante’s understanding that human existence is “ordered by two final goals” and how this un...
So much has been written about Dante\u27s Comedy in the seven centuries since its creation that it i...
«Beltate» and «amore» in the Vita nova: the principles of Dante’s poetic theology. - A critical anal...
The Comedy soon had a widespread and attracted the admiration of the artists and, in the first place...
I discuss Dante’s understanding that human existence is “ordered by two final goals” and how this un...
The way of reason must yield to the way of the heart. In Dante’s Divine Comedy, the Latin poet Vergi...
The purpose of this thesis is to take a philosophical look at the Divine Comedy of Dante. Since Dant...
This thesis explores the conception and representation of virtu in Dante's Commedia. In order to b...
This dissertation examines Dante’s love for Beatrice, which begins as erotic passion accompanied by ...
As Dante explains in his epistle to Can Grande, the purpose of the Comedy is to move the reader from...
Love and Civitas: Dante’s Ethical Journey in the Vita Nuova Alfred Robert Crudale University of Con...
The paper considers the role of antique philosophy in medieval theology. Dante’s «Divine Comedy» was...
Dante\u27s Commedia derives its form and content from the philosophy of St.Thomas Aquinas. It is a p...
Throughout Dante's work, and especially in the Convivio and in the Monarchia, the interlacing of pol...
The De Vulgari Eloquentia is a study of the vernacular language, its origin and its literary manifes...
I discuss Dante’s understanding that human existence is “ordered by two final goals” and how this un...
So much has been written about Dante\u27s Comedy in the seven centuries since its creation that it i...
«Beltate» and «amore» in the Vita nova: the principles of Dante’s poetic theology. - A critical anal...
The Comedy soon had a widespread and attracted the admiration of the artists and, in the first place...
I discuss Dante’s understanding that human existence is “ordered by two final goals” and how this un...
The way of reason must yield to the way of the heart. In Dante’s Divine Comedy, the Latin poet Vergi...