Italian Renaissance thought has been gaining ever-increasing recognition
as seminal to the thought of the whole Renaissance period, affecting in
many subtle ways the development and understanding of artistic,
literary, scientific, and religious movements. The importance, then, of
this detailed and careful survey of Italy's leading Renaissance
philosophers and the intricate philosophical problems of the time can
scarcely be exaggerated.
Based upon the 1961 Arensberg Lectures, given at Stanford University,
this collection of essays offers a genuinely unified interpretation of
Italian Renaissance thought by describing and evaluating the
philosophies of eight pivotal figures: Petrarch, Valla, Ficino, Pico,
Pomponazzi, Telesio, Patrizi, and Bruno. The essays not only discuss the
life, writings, and main ideas of these eight thinkers, but also
establish through a connective text, the place each of them occupies in
the general intellectual development of the Italian Renaissance.