Narratives of Peace in Religious Discourses - Perspectives from Europe and the Mediterranean in the Early Modern Era - Ludovico Battista

Narratives of Peace in Religious Discourses - Perspectives from Europe and the Mediterranean in the Early Modern Era - Ludovico Battista

The Political Peace of Luis Vives and the Religious Peace of Pico della Mirandola: Philosophical Perspectives Between Italy and Spain

Narratives of Peace in Religious Discourses - Perspectives from Europe and the Mediterranean in the Early Modern Era - Ludovico Battista

Manuel López Forjas [+-]
Universidad Autónoma de Madrid
Manuel López Forjas holds a PhD in Hispanic Studies from the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, where he has taught History of Spanish and Latin American thought at the Department of Social Anthropology and Spanish Philosophical Thought. He is a member of the Instituto Universitario La Corte en Europa (IULCE). His research focuses on the intellectual history of Latin America and Spain and the modern history of the Hispanic world. Recently, he has edited some manuscripts from the Spanish philosopher José Ortega y Gasset: Notas de trabajo de la carpeta Vives, in “Revista de Estudios Orteguianos” 39-43.
Veronica Tartabini [+-]
Universidad Autónoma de Madrid
Veronica Tartabini is a PhD student of the Department of Social Anthropology and Spanish Philosophical Thought at the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid. Her research focuses on the reception of Spanish mysticism in Italy – especially on the Discalced Carmelites – including María Zambrano’s philosophy. Recent publications: Rendere eterno l’istante: misticismo e realismo nel Velázquez di María Zambrano e José Ortega Y Gasset, In “B@belonline”, (2021), 8, 339-355; Verso un sapere sul sacro: dal misticismo spagnolo alla ragione poetica, in “Bajo Palabra. Revista de Filosofía”, 251-272; Pico della Mirandola y Santa Teresa: el camino compartido del Humanismo, in https://theconversation.com/pico-della-mirandola-y-santa-teresa-el-camino-compartido-del-humanismo-175103

Description

Giovanni Pico della Mirandola (1463–1494) offers a proposal for preserving religious peace in his well-known book Oratio elegantissima (1486). The intellectual, whose work is recognized as the manifesto of Italian humanism, opens his Novecento Tesi with the intention of demonstrating that Christianity is the peaceful meeting point of all existing cultural, theological, philosophical and, especially, religious traditions. Innocent VIII hindered his project of religious peace, but Fernán Peréz de Oliva (1492–1533) and Juan Luis Vives (1493–1540) took it upon themselves to introduce it and spread it in the Hispanic-speaking lands. It was the Valencian philosopher, in voluntary exile in Antwerp, who wrote a treatise entitled De concordia et discordia in 1529, inviting us to reflect on the devastating consequences of belligerent activity. He shares with Erasmus of Rotterdam (1466–1536) the rejection of the concept of “just war” (bellum iustium) and of every possible manifestation of militarism. For the Spanish humanist, politics can fulfil its most noble functions, only in favour of the achievement of peaceful international coexistence. Therefore, we present a comparison between the principles of religious peace of Pico and the concept of political peace in Vives, in order to shed light on two philosophical perspectives converging in the defense of universal peace.

Notify A Colleague

Citation

López Forjas , Manuel ; Tartabini, Veronica. The Political Peace of Luis Vives and the Religious Peace of Pico della Mirandola: Philosophical Perspectives Between Italy and Spain. Narratives of Peace in Religious Discourses - Perspectives from Europe and the Mediterranean in the Early Modern Era. Equinox eBooks Publishing, United Kingdom. p. 59-89 Mar 2024. ISBN 9781800503885. https://www.equinoxpub.com/home/view-chapter/?id=44437. Date accessed: 25 Apr 2024 doi: 10.1558/equinox.44437. Mar 2024

Dublin Core Metadata