| Plethon |
Website Links For Gemistus |
Information AboutPlethon |
| CATEGORIES ABOUT GEMISTUS PLETHO | |
| byzantine philosophers | |
| 1355 births | |
| 1452 deaths | |
| greek renaissance humanists | |
| neoplatonists | |
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As a young man he began to study Plato , and was so enamoured with the philosopher that he took the similar-sounding name ''Plethon'' ("the full"). Plethon is also an archaic translation of the modern Greek ''gemistos'' ("full, stuffed"). Plethon was the author of ''De Differentiis'', a description of the differences between Plato and Aristotle s' conceptions of God . George Scholarios (who became Gennadius II , Patriarch of Constantinople) later defended Aristotle and convinced the Byzantine emperor Manuel II Palaeologus that Plethon's support for Plato amounted to Heresy . Manuel had Plethon confined in Mistra, though he remained somewhat of a celebrity. In Mistra he wrote pamphlets to Manuel II describing how the Empire could be reorganized according to Plato's Republic . He also wrote a ''Summary of the Doctrines of Zoroaster and Plato'', which detailed his own pseudo- Polytheistic beliefs. These works did not help to clear him of the charge of heresy. He also wrote about the condition of the Peloponnesus, compiled several volumes of excerpts from ancient authors, and wrote a number of works on Geography , Music and other subjects. Byzantine scholars had been in contact with their counterparts in Western Europe since the time of the Latin Empire , and especially since the Byzantine Empire had begun to ask for Western European help against the Ottomans in the 14th Century . The Western Europe had some access to ancient Greek philosophy through the Roman Catholic Church and the Muslims, but the Byzantines had many documents and interpretations that they had never seen before. Byzantine scholarship became more fully available to the West after 1438 , when Byzantine Emperor John VIII Palaeologus attended the Council Of Ferrara and the Council Of Florence to discuss a union of the Greek and Roman churches. Accompanying John VIII were Plethon, his student Johannes Bessarion , as well as George Scholarios . As a secular scholar Plethon was often not needed at the council. Instead, he set up a temporary school to teach interested Florentines about previously unknown (to them) works of Plato. He essentially reintroduced Plato to the Western world, and shook the exclusive domination which Aristotle had exercised over European thought for eight centuries. Cosimo De' Medici attended these lectures and later founded the Accademia Platonica in Florence, where Italian students of Plethon continued to teach after the conclusion of the council. Because of this Plethon is considered one of the most important influences on the Italian Renaissance . Marsilio Ficino , the Florentine humanist and the first director of the Accademia Platonica, paid Plethon the ultimate honour, calling him 'the second Plato'. He died in Mistra in 1452, just before the Fall Of Constantinople to the Ottomans. His ''Summary'', considered the most heretical of his works, was later burned by Gennadius II. Many of his other works still exist in manuscript form in various European libraries. Most of Pletho's works can be found in J. P. Migne , '' Patrologia Graeca '', collection; for a complete list see Fabricius , ''Bibliotheca Graeca'' (ed. Harles ), xii. REFERENCES |
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