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  1. Dante Alighieri.Winthrop Wetherbee & Jason Aleksander - 2008 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
    Dante’s engagement with philosophy cannot be studied apart from his vocation as a writer, in which he sought to raise the level of public discourse by educating his countrymen and inspiring them to pursue happiness in the contemplative life. He was one of the most learned Italian laymen of his day, intimately familiar with Aristotelian logic and natural philosophy, theology, and classical literature. He is, of course,most famous for having written the Divine Comedy, but in his poetry as well as (...)
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  • Momus sive de Principe y las Intercenales de Leon Battista Alberti: la simulación, el absurdo y la risa.Mariana Sverlij - 2013 - Circe de Clásicos y Modernos 17 (2):151-167.
    Lejos de la interpretación de Leon Battista Alberti como prototipo del "hombre universal", GARIN ha reconocido el carácter contradictorio del pensamiento albertiano. En efecto, en la extensa y polifacética obra del humanista genovés coexisten dos visiones antagónicas del hombre y el mundo. A una le corresponde la confianza en la razón, a la otra la constatación del carácter absurdo de la existencia. Este Alberti "sombrío" se expresa en las páginas de Momus y las Intercenales. En ellas, la apelación a una (...)
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