Michael J. B. Allen is Distinguished Professor of English at the University of California, Los Angeles. James Hankins is Professor of History at Harvard University and founder and General Editor of the I Tatti Renaissance Library. He is the author of Virtue Politics: Soulcraft and Statecraft in Renaissance Italy, winner of the Marraro Prize and a Times Literary Supplement Book of the Year; Political Meritocracy in Renaissance Italy: The Virtuous Republic of Francesco Patrizi of Siena; and Plato in the Italian Renaissance; and editor of The Cambridge Companion to Renaissance Philosophy. Widely regarded as one of the world’s leading authorities on Renaissance philosophy and political thought, he is a Corresponding Member of the British Academy.
The I Tatti project represents a major contribution to Renaissance
studies, as it becomes increasingly necessary to produce reliable
editions and translations of works of the Italian Renaissance
written in Latin. By providing an accurate text and a readable
translation in an elegant yet affordable format, this [edition]
will benefit both scholars and students, who might not be familiar
with Ficino's sometimes difficult and elliptical Latin. It will
interest not only those who are working on Ficino and Italian
humanism but also anyone who is concerned with the history of
Platonism and Neoplatonism. No doubt this edition will stimulate
further studies on Ficino's Platonic Theology, which will in turn
enlighten significant aspects of Ficino's thought, identify new
sources and provide a comprehensive exegesis of this fundamental
text.
*Bryn Mawr Classical Review*
Ficino set out to show that the ancient Neoplatonic philosophy
embodied a "gentile theological tradition," one that complemented
the Mosaic revelation to the Jews and prepared its devotees for the
final truths of Christianity. Ficino worked in full knowledge of
the internal complications of Neoplatonism. He wrote and argued in
styles that ranged from the logical and synthetic to the poetic and
evocative, as he struggled to find ways to prove that the universe
was orderly and governed by a Creator and to lay out the place
within it of the immortal human soul.
*New York Review of Books*
Allen's translation of Ficino's work is a crucial contribution to
Renaissance studies.
*Aestimatio*
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