Dante and the Blessed Virgin
Autor Ralph Mcinernyen Limba Engleză Hardback – 14 ian 2010
Dante and the Blessed Virgin is distinguished philosopher Ralph McInerny's eloquent reading of one of western literature's most famous works by a Catholic writer. The book provides Catholic readers new to Dante's The Divine Comedy (or Commedia) with a concise companion volume. McInerny argues that the Blessed Virgin Mary is the key to Dante. She is behind the scenes at the very beginning of the Commedia, and she is found at the end in the magnificent closing cantos of the Paradiso. McInerny also discusses Dante's Vita Nuova, where Mary is present as the object of the young Beatrice's devotion.
McInerny draws from a diverse group of writers throughout this book, including Plato, Aristotle, St. Bernard, St. Bonaventure, St. Thomas Aquinas, and George Santayana, among others. It is St. Thomas, however, to whom McInerny most often turns, and this book also provides an accessible introduction to Thomistic moral philosophy focusing on the appetites, the ordering of goods, the distinction between the natural and the supernatural orders, the classification of capital vices and virtues, and the nature of the theological virtues. This engagingly written book will serve as a source of inspiration and devotion for anyone approaching Dante's work for the first time as well as those who value the work of Ralph McInerny.
"Dante was a literary genius with a profound understanding of St. Thomas Aquinas and the philosophia perennis that structured and permeated the Divina Commedia. Who better to help us get beyond the (brilliant) surface to the depths of Dante than the most literarily genial of Thomas' twentieth (and twenty-first) century disciples, the indefatigable Ralph McInerny? Dante needed guides, from Vergil to Beatrice, to reach the summit of Paradiso. Fortunately, we have Ralph McInerny to accompany us on the same journey." --Fr. Joseph Fessio, S.J., Founder and Editor, Ignatius Press
"Weaving together poetry, philosophy and theology, Ralph McInerny shows that 'the Blessed Virgin Mary is the key to Dante.' Starting with the Vita Nuova and the beginning of the Divine Comedy, this becomes ever more explicit throughout the great poem, till the magnificent closing cantos of the Paradiso. The book is beautifully written, making sense of every step, however complex at times, of the great journey to the gate of heaven described by Dante in the Commedia, drawing on Scripture, on Aquinas, on philosophers like Aristotle, on a medley of modern and contemporary writers, with immense learning, always worn lightly and made easily accessible. Dominant are themes that concern everyone, such as love or happiness, are treated with freshness and clarity so the reader is made to feel he or she is discovering them anew. The total effect is joy induced by the incredible wealth of content of this little book and by the light it sheds on so many vital issues." --Thomas De Koninck, Laval University
McInerny draws from a diverse group of writers throughout this book, including Plato, Aristotle, St. Bernard, St. Bonaventure, St. Thomas Aquinas, and George Santayana, among others. It is St. Thomas, however, to whom McInerny most often turns, and this book also provides an accessible introduction to Thomistic moral philosophy focusing on the appetites, the ordering of goods, the distinction between the natural and the supernatural orders, the classification of capital vices and virtues, and the nature of the theological virtues. This engagingly written book will serve as a source of inspiration and devotion for anyone approaching Dante's work for the first time as well as those who value the work of Ralph McInerny.
"Dante was a literary genius with a profound understanding of St. Thomas Aquinas and the philosophia perennis that structured and permeated the Divina Commedia. Who better to help us get beyond the (brilliant) surface to the depths of Dante than the most literarily genial of Thomas' twentieth (and twenty-first) century disciples, the indefatigable Ralph McInerny? Dante needed guides, from Vergil to Beatrice, to reach the summit of Paradiso. Fortunately, we have Ralph McInerny to accompany us on the same journey." --Fr. Joseph Fessio, S.J., Founder and Editor, Ignatius Press
"Weaving together poetry, philosophy and theology, Ralph McInerny shows that 'the Blessed Virgin Mary is the key to Dante.' Starting with the Vita Nuova and the beginning of the Divine Comedy, this becomes ever more explicit throughout the great poem, till the magnificent closing cantos of the Paradiso. The book is beautifully written, making sense of every step, however complex at times, of the great journey to the gate of heaven described by Dante in the Commedia, drawing on Scripture, on Aquinas, on philosophers like Aristotle, on a medley of modern and contemporary writers, with immense learning, always worn lightly and made easily accessible. Dominant are themes that concern everyone, such as love or happiness, are treated with freshness and clarity so the reader is made to feel he or she is discovering them anew. The total effect is joy induced by the incredible wealth of content of this little book and by the light it sheds on so many vital issues." --Thomas De Koninck, Laval University
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780268035174
ISBN-10: 0268035172
Pagini: 184
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 13 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Ediția:1st Edition
Editura: MR – University of Notre Dame Press
ISBN-10: 0268035172
Pagini: 184
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 13 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Ediția:1st Edition
Editura: MR – University of Notre Dame Press
Recenzii
"The book's distinguishing feature is its focus on the role played by the Blessed Virgin in the Commedia's account of Dante's journey of salvation. . . . McInerny also gives careful and deserved attention to Dante's depictions of Mary's virtues that grace the terraces of the Purgatorio and provide the hope-sustaining counterpoint to the sins being expiated there. And he fittingly celebrates the glorification of the Virgin in canto XXIII of the Paradiso." --America
"Serving as both a uniquely focused companion to the Divine Comedy and a treatise on the enigmatic, central role of Mary in the poem, this offering by the late Ralph McInerny, a noted philosopher, allows the Catholic reader in particular to recognize Dante's 'devotion to the Blessed Virgin in warm continuity with his or her own beliefs and practices.' . . . Viewing Mary as the moral and philosophical key that unlocks the deepest criticism, McInerny writes with clarity, rigor, and elan." --Choice
"The late McInerny's final book provides an accessible, skillfully written, and erudite introduction to reading Dante for theological and philosophical content. McInerny illuminates the religious and philosophical geography that surrounds the Commedia. In doing so, he provides the reader, especially the novice, with a veritable compendium to philosophy in the Commedia." --Religious Studies Review
Notă biografică
Ralph McInerny was a professor of philosophy and the Michael P. Grace Professor of Medieval Studies at the University of Notre Dame. He was the author and editor of numerous books, including The Writings of Charles De Koninck, Volume Two, also published by the University of Notre Dame Press.