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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Matthias Roick (University of Göttingen, Germany)Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Imprint: Bloomsbury Academic Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 3.00cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.644kg ISBN: 9781474281850ISBN 10: 1474281850 Pages: 336 Publication Date: 23 February 2017 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsIntroduction Part I: The ‘Great Pontano’ 1. The Storms of Life 2. The Haven of Philosophy Part II: Rewriting Moral Philosophy 3. Learned Authority 4. Latin Philosophy Part III: The Secrets of Virtue 5. The Rule of Reason 6. Beyond the Veil Conclusion Appendix 1: Chronology of Pontano's Works Appendix 2: Chronology pf Pontano's Life and Political Events Appendix 3: Moral Virtues in Aristotle and Pontano Notes Bibliography IndexReviewsThis is a brilliant study of one of the most versatile minds that the humanist culture of Renaissance Italy has produced. Written in a superb style, Roick presents, for the first time, a comprehensive interpretation of Pontano as a political actor, diplomat, and philosopher, whose work can be seen as a creative rewriting of Aristotelian virtue ethics. To understand the world of Pontano, Roick has crossed different fields of inquiry including philosophy, history, literature, poetry, and astrology, and his book is an excellent guide through this neglected but important territory of intellectual history. It is thereby not only the first book on Pontano as a thinker in his own right. It also makes a convincing case for the inclusion of Renaissance humanism in the study of moral and political philosophy in early-modern Europe. -- Lodi Nauta, Professor in the History of Philosophy, University of Groningen, The Netherlands "This is a brilliant study of one of the most versatile minds that the humanist culture of Renaissance Italy has produced. Written in a superb style, Roick presents, for the first time, a comprehensive interpretation of Pontano as a political actor, diplomat, and philosopher, whose work can be seen as a creative rewriting of Aristotelian virtue ethics. To understand the world of Pontano, Roick has crossed different fields of inquiry including philosophy, history, literature, poetry, and astrology, and his book is an excellent guide through this neglected but important territory of intellectual history. It is thereby not only the first book on Pontano as a thinker in his own right. It also makes a convincing case for the inclusion of Renaissance humanism in the study of moral and political philosophy in early-modern Europe. -- Lodi Nauta, Professor in the History of Philosophy, University of Groningen, The Netherlands The subject of this interesting and innovative study by Matthias Roick is the moral and political thought of the prolific Neapolitan diplomat and humanist, Giovanni Pontano (1426-1503). It is based on the range of Pontano’s various treatises and tracts, as well as on his better known dialogues and poems; and it approaches his thought not only in terms of individual doctrines and theses, but, more comprehensively, in terms of its re-envisioning of Aristotelian moral and political thought “in a humanist key.” Centered as it is on the complex notion of virtue, Pontano’s Aristotelianism emerges not just as an academic or “strained” Aristotelianism, but rather as a powerful guide to knowledge and to human action in the turbulent world of fifteenth century Italian politics. -- Michael Allen FBA, Distinguished Professor Emeritus, UCLA, USA As it follows the theme of virtue throughout Giovanni Pontano's philosophical production, Roick's book is an important contribution to current scholarship on Early Modern Aristotelianism, as well as an exemplary work in intellectual history. In Roick's hands, the ""great Pontano"", his relationship with Aristotle and Medieval scholasticism, his role in the Aragonese Kindgom of Naples and the history of Quattrocento Italy are not merely erudite topics, but parts of a thoughtful reflection on how historical contexts shape philosophical ideas as well as our own way to look at Renaissance culture. -- Matteo Soranzo, Associate Professor of Italian Studies at McGill University, McGill University, Canada" Author InformationMatthias Roick is Freigeist Fellow for the History of Ethics, University of Göttingen, Germany. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |