preview

Dantes Inferno Knowledge And Virtue

Decent Essays

Knowledge, truth, and virtue are all things desired by Dante, and these concepts are the underlying reasons why he writes the Commedia. In the Heaven of Mars of Paradiso is where Dante meets his great great grandfather, Cacciaguida, who provides him with the immensely valuable information on how to turn his impending exile into a pilgrimage. His journey through the afterlife is for the reason of enlightening all people for the greater good, which in turn “is no small claim to honor” (Par.17.134-35). Dante’s awareness of this honorable regard, along with the hunger for learning that he exemplifies and acts upon parallels to Ulysses’ journey in Inferno to discover more than the human experience offers. The central reason why it parallels so nicely …show more content…

However, Dante learns the conceptions of knowledge, truth, and virtue based off the differences he sees between his journey and Ulysses’. The primary place Dante learns about these differences is the Heaven of Mars through Cacciaguida. Ulysses is representative of Dante’s own sins, but there is a major distinction between their journeys‒ Ulysses’s journey was sinful because of its basis on selfish desire and self-seeking satisfaction, where Dante’s journey is divine and his use of intelligence is for the greater good of people to know the word of …show more content…

26.97-98). He claims that his life’s duty is motivated by the hunger for knowledge, truth, and virtue. It is stated by Ulysses to “follow virtue and knowledge,”(Inf. 26.119) and it is with this consideration by which he convinces his shipmates to follow his selfish desires and travel beyond where they are meant to go. It could be evaluated in such a way that there is no fault in Ulysses’ actions. However, through examining Ulysses’ intentions on a journey granted to him only by himself exemplifies a great sense of mortal arrogance and, as a pagan, rejects a connection with God which in turn highlights his limitations as a mortal and forces the journey to discontinue. There is an additional layer, too, of Ulysses using leadership authority over his crew. His prideful intellect and perception of right and wrong directly relates to that authoritative position, and because he lacks the capability of being an individual separated from his pride, he in turn lacks the ability to be a good citizen. What he is specifically reprimanded for is the misuse of that conceited intellect that deceives others and drives him to dismiss the primary responsibilities of his homeland. Surely even if Ulysses’ objective was not meant to be interpreted as a sinful action in Dante’s writing, he still does not allow knowledge and virtue to be delineated by

Get Access