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Luc Brisson

How Philosophers Saved Myths

Allegorical Interpretation and Classical Mythology

Translated by Catherine Tihanyi
221 pages,  6 x 9  © 2004

Cloth $32.00

ISBN: 9780226075358   Published October 2004

Paper $19.00

ISBN: 9780226075372   Published June 2008

E-book from $5.00 to $19.00 (about e-books)

ISBN: 9780226075389

This study explains how the myths of Greece and Rome were transmitted from antiquity to the Renaissance. Luc Brisson argues that philosophy was ironically responsible for saving myth from historical annihilation. Although philosophy was initially critical of myth because it could not be declared true or false and because it was inferior to argumentation, mythology was progressively reincorporated into philosophy through allegorical exegesis. Brisson shows to what degree allegory was employed among philosophers and how it enabled myth to take on a number of different interpretive systems throughout the centuries: moral, physical, psychological, political, and even metaphysical.

How Philosophers Saved Myths also describes how, during the first years of the modern era, allegory followed a more religious path, which was to assume a larger role in Neoplatonism. Ultimately, Brisson explains how this embrace of myth was carried forward by Byzantine thinkers and artists throughout the Middle Ages and Renaissance; after the triumph of Chistianity, Brisson argues, myths no longer had to agree with just history and philosophy but the dogmas of the Church as well.
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