Note sull'episodio

In the twelfth century, in the city of Córdoba in al-Andalus, a man sits in a library that many Europeans of his time would have found unimaginable. Shelves groan under texts in Arabic, Latin, and Greek. Astrolabes and globes hang from the ceiling; mathematical tables, legal manuals, works of poetry and theology, and volumes of Aristotle line the walls. Outside, the city is a crossroads of cultures: Muslims, Christians, and Jews live under Islamic rule; scholars argue in courtyards; merchants cross the Mediterranean with books as well as goods. Inside, this man bends over a manuscript of Aristotle, pen in hand, writing line after line of commentary. His aim is bold: to make Aristotle speak clearly to his own age and to show that reason and revelation, properly understood, do not conflict.

Selenius Media

Parole chiave
western philosophyhistory of philosophymoral philosophyantique thinkersgreek thinkerswestern philosophersWESTERN MORALStheologiantheologywestern christianitystoicsAverroes - Ibn Rushd