
Dante's Self-Angelizing: A Prophecy of Egalitarian Transhumanism
Author(s) -
Joshua M. Hall
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
labyrinth
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2410-4817
pISSN - 1561-8927
DOI - 10.25180/lj.v22i2.249
Subject(s) - banquet , transhumanism , virtue , philosophy , paradise , self , power (physics) , literature , heaven , epistemology , theology , art , physics , quantum mechanics
In this article, I argue that Dante's philosophical goal is what I term "self-angelizing," an ennobling philosophical education granting one the knowledge and power of an angel, which the medieval scholastics conceived as celestial intelligences. Dante's own path to self-angelizing begins in his early New Life, which approaches a living Beatrice as exemplar of terrestrial angels. Next, Dante's middle-period Banquet discusses following Beatrice into self-angelizing through an education in philosophical virtue. Finally, in his climactic Paradise, Dante performs his own self-angelizing. The upshot of this journey is Dante's prophecy of an egalitarian transhumanism.