Perception and Passion in Dante's Comedy

Front Cover
Cambridge University Press, 1993 M09 16 - 348 pages
Patrick Boyde argues that the way in which Dante represents what he (or his fictional self) saw and felt was profoundly influenced by the thirteenth-century science of psychology. Professor Boyde offers an authoritative account of the way in which vision and the emotions were understood in Dante's lifetime, and rereads many of the most dramatic and moving episodes in the Comedy, throwing light on Dante's narrative technique. Seeing and feeling were known to be inextricably bound up with thinking and voluntary action, and were treated as special cases of motion and motive forces. Dante's treatment of perception and passion is set in the context of Aristotelian epistemology, ethics and physics. In these areas too a knowledge of Dante's philosophical ideas is shown to illuminate his poetic representation of mental processes and value judgements, and the meaning of his journey towards the source of goodness and truth.
 

Contents

The prestige and unity of the Aristotelian corpus
3
Movement and change in lifeless bodies
11
growth and reproduction in plant life
32
sensation and locomotion in animal life
44
Perception of light and colour
61
Perception of shape size number movement
93
Imagining and dreaming
119
Bodylanguage and the physiology of passion
140
Aspects of human freedom
193
Fear
217
Anger
245
Desire
275
Notes
302
Select bibliography
332
Index of longer quotations
338
Copyright

the powers of the mind
173

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