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Sun And The Other Stars Of Dante Alighieri, The: A Cosmographic Journey Through The Divina Commedia [Kõva köide]

(-), (Univ Of Naples Federico Ii, Italy)
  • Formaat: Hardback, 180 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 28-Feb-2022
  • Kirjastus: World Scientific Publishing Co Pte Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 9811245495
  • ISBN-13: 9789811245497
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 180 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 28-Feb-2022
  • Kirjastus: World Scientific Publishing Co Pte Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 9811245495
  • ISBN-13: 9789811245497
Teised raamatud teemal:

The Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri is the story of a journey across the Universe as it was known in the Middle Ages, a work of science fiction ante litteram. Dante had an encyclopedic mind, no doubt, and his poem is the most widely read book after the Bible. He was a master of the astronomical knowledge of his time, and used astronomy in his work to indicate places, to measure time, and to exemplify beauty. Indeed, in the Convivio, he wrote that science is ""the ultimate perfection of our soul"" and ""astronomy — more than any other science — is noble and high for a noble and high subject."" We propose a reading of the Divine Comedy through astronomy with a journey starting from the Earth, proceeding to the Moon, the planets, and to the outermost edges of the Universe. The way in which Dante connects ancient astronomy with modern conceptions of the cosmos will astonish readers more than 700 years later.

1 Introduction
1(4)
2 Historical introduction
5(42)
2.1 The start of a conflict for the auctoritas and the imperium
5(3)
2.2 The era of the Carolingian kings
8(3)
2.3 Otto I of Saxony and the birth of the Holy Roman Empire
11(2)
2.4 The first Saxon dynasty and Italy
13(4)
2.5 The Salic emperors and the Investiture Controversy
17(4)
2.6 The Normans of Italy
21(1)
2.7 Henry V of Franconia and Conrad of Hohenstaufen
22(3)
2.8 The birth of the communes in Italy
25(2)
2.9 The Italian politics of Frederick I Barbarossa
27(4)
2.10 The crisis of the empire: Henry VI and Otto IV
31(2)
2.11 Emperor Frederick II of Swabia and king Manfred
33(4)
2.12 "Florence within the ancient circle" (Par. XV, 97)
37(6)
2.13 To the end of our story
43(4)
3 Dante's biography and works
47(6)
3.1 Birth and infancy
47(1)
3.2 Youth
48(1)
3.3 Public life
48(1)
3.4 Exile
49(4)
4 Astronomy before Dante
53(22)
4.1 An ancient science
53(2)
4.2 The dawn of heliocentrism: the Pythagoreans
55(2)
4.3 Plato and Eudoxus: the preconceived model of the world
57(2)
4.4 Dante's astronomical sources
59(2)
4.5 Aristotle, "master of those who know"
61(1)
4.6 The terrestrial world
62(2)
4.7 The celestial world
64(5)
4.8 Claudius Ptolemy and mathematical syntax: a model of the world that lasted fourteen centuries
69(3)
4.9 Can we say that Dante was a scientist?
72(3)
5 The calendar of the Comedy
75(6)
5.1 The date and the duration of Dante's journey
75(1)
5.2 The error of the Julian calendar
76(4)
5.3 The date of creation
80(1)
6 The Earth of Dante
81(12)
6.1 The infernal abyss
83(4)
6.2 The position of the selva oscura
87(1)
6.3 The folk volo of Ulysses
87(3)
6.4 Crossing the Earth's center
90(1)
6.5 The island of Purgatory
90(2)
6.6 The snow on the Apennines and the shadowless lands
92(1)
6.7 Buggea and Marseille at the same longitude
92(1)
7 Atmospheric phenomena
93(8)
7.1 The rainbow
93(2)
7.2 The wind in the divine forest
95(1)
7.3 The atmospheric dust
95(2)
7.4 The shadow of the Earth at the horizon
97(1)
7.5 The lightnings
97(1)
7.6 The shooting stars
98(1)
7.7 The comets
99(2)
8 The motions of the heavens
101(2)
9 The Moon
103(14)
9.1 The setting of the Moon
103(1)
9.2 The Moon at midnight
104(1)
9.3 The geomancers
105(1)
9.4 Penetration into the Moon
105(1)
9.5 The Moon spots
106(5)
9.6 A lunar clock
111(2)
9.7 The tides
113(4)
10 The planets
117(10)
10.1 Mercury
117(1)
10.2 Venus
117(2)
10.3 Sun
119(4)
10.4 Mars
123(1)
10.5 Jupiter
124(1)
10.6 Saturn
124(3)
11 The stars
127(6)
11.1 The four stars
127(1)
11.2 The settentrione
128(1)
11.3 The most beautiful stars
129(4)
12 Mystery of the Milky Way
133(8)
12.1 The Galaxy
134(5)
12.2 The Magellanic Clouds
139(2)
13 An unlimited but finite Universe
141(10)
14 Parallel Universes
151(6)
15 Astrology
157(6)
16 Conclusions
163(2)
Index of cosmographic passages from the Commedia 165(4)
Bibliography 169