art and architecture bookstore
italiano

email/login

password

remember me on this computer

send


Forgot your password?
Insert your email/login here and receive it at the given email address.

send

chiudi

FB googleplus
ricerca avanzata

The Spell of Calcidius. Platonic Concepts and Images in the Medieval West

Sismel - Edizioni del Galluzzo

Tavarnuzze, 2008; bound, pp. XXIII-183, cm 18x25.
(Millennio Medievale. 74).

series: Millennio Medievale

ISBN: 88-8450-270-5 - EAN13: 9788884502704

Subject: Essays (Art or Architecture),Societies and Customs

Period: 0-1000 (0-XI) Ancient World,All Periods

Places: Europe

Languages:  italian text  

Weight: 0.88 kg


While histories of literature and philosophy have till now presented Calcidius as if he were no more than a secondhand mediator of Platonic thought, Peter Dronke, in The Spell of Calcidius, shows that this judgement must be radically revised. Calcidius' commentary (probably of the early fourth century) on Plato's Timaeus is a deeply individual work, which was able to inspire a fresh way of looking for truth, of searching for a world-picture that was not ready-made, among exceptional thinkers across eight centuries. The spell Calcidius cast was intellectual freedom, a Christian's refusal to make Christian propaganda, a spirit of open enquiry. After the discussion of some key cosmological motifs in Calcidius himself and in Boethius, there follow chapters on the brilliant transformations of Calcidian thought in the ninth century by Eriugena and others; on the odi et amo towards Calcidius of Manegold of Lautenbach in the eleventh century; and on the ardent assimilation of his thought in the early twelfth by "us who love Plato", as William of Conches proclaimed. The final chapter shows how in Bernardus Silvestris' epic, the Cosmographia (1147/8), the daring uses of language and speculation begun by Calcidius find their culminating creative renewal.

YOU CAN ALSO BUY



SPECIAL OFFERS AND BESTSELLERS
€ 55.00

ships in 2/3 weeks


design e realizzazione: Vincent Wolterbeek / analisi e programmazione: Rocco Barisci