Marsilio Ficino (1433-1499), the Florentine
scholar-philosopher-magus, was largely responsible for the
Renaissance revival of Plato. The publication of his Latin
translations of the dialogues in 1484 was an intellectual event of
the first magnitude, making the Platonic canon accessible to
western Europe after the passing of a millennium and establishing
Plato as an authority for Renaissance thought. This volume contains
Ficino's extended analysis and commentary on the "Phaedrus," which
he explicates as a meditation on "beauty in all its forms" and a
sublime work of theology. In the commentary on the "Ion," Ficino
explores a poetics of divine inspiration that leads to the
Neoplatonist portrayal of the soul as a rhapsode whose song is an
ascent into the mind of God. Both works bear witness to Ficino's
attempt to revive a Christian Platonism and what might be called an
Orphic Christianity.
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