Description

Volume 1.

Volumes 1-10 are available here as a complete set at a reduced price.

MARSILIO FICINO of Florence (1433-99) was one of the most influential thinkers of the Renaissance. He put before society a new ideal of human nature, emphasising its divine potential. As teacher and guide to a remarkable circle of men, he made a vital contribution to changes that were taking place in European thought. For Ficino, the writings of Plato provided the key to the most important knowledge for mankind, knowledge of God and the soul. It was the absorption of this knowledge that proved so important to Ficino, to his circle, and to later writers and artists.

As a young man, Ficino had been directed by Cosimo de’ Medici towards the study of Plato in the original Greek. Later he formed a close connection with Cosimo’s grandson, Lorenzo de’ Medici, under whom Florence achieved its age of brilliance. Gathered round Ficino and Lorenzo were such men as Landino, Bembo, Poliziano and Pico della Mirandola. The ideas they discussed became central to the work of Spenser, Shakespeare, Donne, Botticelli, Michelangelo, Raphael, Dürer, and many other writers and artists.

The first letter in this volume is from Cosimo to Ficino, inviting him to visit him on his estate at Careggii and to bring with him ‘Plato’s book on The Highest Good’ (the Philebus) which Cosimo had asked him to translate in 1463. Though there is some uncertainty about the precise nature of Ficino’s Platonic Academy, in another letter he replies to a correspondent’s request for ‘that maxim of mine that is inscribed around the walls of the Academy’.

This revised edition has corrected errors made in the original translation more than four decades ago, and the notes to the letters and the biographical notes have incorporated much new material from scholarship on the period which has grown enormously in the intervening years and continues to flourish.

______________________________________________

Author Details
Translated from the Latin by members of the Language Department of the School of Economic Science, London

You can read more about Arthur Farndell, who collaborated as a translator on this project, on his author page.

The Editors, Valery Rees, Adrian Bertoluzzi and Arthur Farndell, have been members of the team of scholars at the School of Economic Science in London for more than 40 years. Arthur Farndell has also the translated many of Marsilio Ficino’s commentaries on Plato’s Dialogues which have been published in five volumes as All Things Natural, Evermore Shall Be So, Gardens of Philosophy, On the Nature of Love, and When Philosophers Rule.

______________________________________________

Reviews
“…so well translated, so well annotated and so beautifully produced that it is a pleasure to read and possess.”
The Heythrop Journal

“A remarkable achievement. Such giants as Ficino deserve a wider audience.”
Umberto Eco, author of The Name of the Rose

“All that we regard as the norm of Western European art – Botticelli’s paintings, Monteverdi’s music, Shakespeare’s philosophical lovers – Berowne and Lorenzo, Jacques and Portia – has flowered from Ficino’s Florence.”
Kathleen Raine, The Times

“A mind endued with fine principles is like a well-tended and fertile field, or a calm and peaceful sea.”
Ficino

“Ficino’s poetic and inspired transmission of the perennial wisdom, alive with compassion and numinous knowledge, is deeply enlightening. At the heart of the Florentine priest-philosopher’s teaching shines the luminous simplicity and mystery of perpetual contemplation and knowledge of the Principle: ‘God is unchanging unity: a single stillness.’”
From a 5* Amazon reviewRead full review here.