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Medieval philosophy a new history of western philosophy volume 2 ( PDFDrive ) 128

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THE SCHOOLMEN the Turks in 1453 led to an inXux of refugees, bringing with them not only their own knowledge of classical Greek but also precious manuscripts of ancient authors These were welcomed both in Rome and in Florence Cosimo de’ Medici commissioned his court philosopher, Marsilio Ficino, to translate the entire works of Plato The work was completed around 1469, when Cosimo’s grandson Lorenzo the MagniWcent succeeded as head of the Medici clan Lorenzo collected Greek manuscripts in his new Laurenziana library, just as Pope Nicholas V and his successors had been doing in the refounded Vatican library Marsilio Ficino gathered round him, at Careggi near Florence, a group of wealthy students of Plato, whom he called his Academy He translated, in addition to Plato, works of Proclus and Plotinus, and the Corpus Hermeticum, a collection of ancient alchemical and astrological writings He wrote commentaries on four major dialogues of Plato and on the Enneads of Plotinus He also wrote a number of short treatises himself, and one major work, the Theologia Platonica (1474), in which he set out his own Neoplatonic account of the soul and its origin and destiny His aim was to combine the Platonic element in the scholastic tradition with a literary and historical appreciation of its origins in the ancient world He regarded the pagan Platonic tradition as itself divinely inspired, and believed that its incorporation in theological teaching was essential if the Christian religion was to be made palatable to the new humanistic intelligentsia Thus he equated the charity which St Paul speaks of in Corinthians with the Eros of the Phaedrus, and identiWed the Christian God with the Republic’s Idea of the Good The most distinguished of Ficino’s Platonic associates was Giovanni Pico, count of Mirandola (1463–94) Well educated in Latin and Greek, Pico learnt Greek and Hebrew at an early age, and in addition to the Hermetic Corpus he made a serious study of the Jewish mystical cabbala He wanted to combine Greek, Hebrew, Muslim, and Christian thought into a great eclectic Platonic synthesis He spelt this out in 900 theses and invited all interested scholars to discuss these with him in a public disputation in Rome in 1487 Pope Innocent VIII forbade the disputation, and appointed a committee to examine the theses for heresy Among the propositions condemned was ‘there is no branch of science which gives us more certainty of Christ’s divinity than magic and cabbala’ The oration which Pico prepared to introduce the aborted disputation survives under the title On the Dignity of Man Pico draws equally on Genesis 109

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