Giovanni pico della mirandola contributions to the renaissance

Giovanni Pico della Mirandola

1. Life

Pico was born on February 24, 1463, to a noble Italian family, the counts of Mirandola and Concordia near Modena in the Emilia-Romagna north of Tuscany. Around the age of fourteen he left for Bologna, intending briefly to study canon law, but within two years he moved to Ferrara and shortly afterward to Padua, where he met one of his most important teachers, Elia del Medigo, a Jew and an Averroist Aristotelian. By the time he left Padua in 1482, he had also felt the attraction of the Platonism being revived by Marsilio Ficino, and by 1484 he was corresponding with Angelo Poliziano and Lorenzo de’Medici about poetry.

In 1485 he traveled from Florence to Paris, the citadel of Aristotelian scholasticism. Before he left, at the age of twenty-two, he had made his first important contribution to philosophy—a defense of the technical terminology which since Petrarch’s time had incited humanist critics of philosophy to attack scholastic Latin as a barbaric violation of classical norms. Having refined his literary talent while de

Giovanni Pico della Mirandola

Italian Renaissance philosopher (1463–1494)

Pico della Mirandola

Portrait from the Uffizi Gallery, in Florence

Born(1463-02-24)24 February 1463

Mirandola, Duchy of Mirandola

Died17 November 1494(1494-11-17) (aged 31)

Florence, Republic of Florence

EducationUniversity of Bologna, University of Ferrara, University of Padua, University of Paris
EraRenaissance philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolRenaissance philosophy
Christian humanism
Neoplatonism

Main interests

Politics, history, religion, esotericism

Giovanni Pico dei conti della Mirandola e della Concordia (PEE-koh DEL-ə mirr-A(H)N-də-lə;[1][2]Italian:[dʒoˈvanniˈpiːkodellamiˈrandola]; Latin: Johannes Picus de Mirandula; 24 February 1463 – 17 November 1494), known as Pico della Mirandola, was an Italian Renaissance nobleman and philosopher.[3] He is famed for the events of 1486, when, at the age of 23, he proposed to defend 900 theses on religion, philosophy, natural ph

Giovanni Pico della Mirandola

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Italianphilosopher and scholar, born 24 February, 1463; died 17 November, 1494. He belonged to a family that had long dwelt in the Castle of Mirandola (Duchy of Modena), which had become independent in the fourteenth century and had received in 1414 from the Emperor Sigismund the fief of Concordia. To devote himself wholly to study, he left his share of the ancestral principality to his two brothers, and in his fourteenth year went to Bologna to study canon law and fit himself for the ecclesiastical career. Repelled, however, by the purely positive science of law, he devoted himself to the study of philosophy and theology, and spent seven years wandering through the chief universities of Italy and France, studying also Greek, Latin, Hebrew, Syriac, and Arabic. An impostor sold him sixty Hebrew manuscripts, asserting positively that t

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