Human Nature and Nature of the State in Dante: from the Possibile Intelect to the State Impossibile

Authors

  • Antonio Sparano Università degli Studi di Napoli

Keywords:

Dante, Monarchia, nature, politics

Abstract

This paper deals with the utopian character of Dante's Monarchia. Specifically, the subject to be dealt concerns the arguments with which Dante would justify the authority of the Empire or Universal Monarch like only apex of the political hierarchy from which all power would derive. The author is confronted with an interpretative line that considers Dante's political thought like a substantially realistic system, especially considering its recovery from a historical reality like that of imperial Rome. Against this position the author shows that the realistic aspirations of Dante's thought fail when Dante pretends to demonstrate philosophically the necessity of Monarchia or Empire. With this aim the author makes a short synthesis of the Florentine's political thought in his greatest political work, the Monarchia, to show that in this treatise there is a radical impossibility of reconciling the historical evidence, resulting from the examination of the imperial history of Rome, and the philosophical arguments, resulting from the examination of the intellectual nature of man

Author Biography

Antonio Sparano, Università degli Studi di Napoli

Doctor en Filosofía Política por la Università degli Studi di Napoli (Italia) y becario pos-doctoral en la Facultad de Filosofía y Letras de la Universidad de Buenos Aires (UBA).

Published

29-11-2019

How to Cite

Sparano, A. (2019). Human Nature and Nature of the State in Dante: from the Possibile Intelect to the State Impossibile. Scripta Mediaevalia, 12(2), 13–34. Retrieved from https://revistas.uncu.edu.ar/ojs3/index.php/scripta/article/view/2651

Issue

Section

Artículos