Redefining Faith in Dante’s “Divine Comedy”
Redefining Faith in Dante’s Divine Comedy (Palgrave Macmillan 2026) offers a philosophical reinterpretation of Dante’s poem, arguing that the Comedy reconfigures “faith” not simply as doctrinal assent, but as a mode of creative and interpretive engagement grounded in practical judgment, or phronēsis, and intellectual humility.
Download the book’s introduction here: https://philpapers.org/archive/ALERFI.pdf
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“Beatrice’s Provocative Perspective on Freedom and Moral Responsibility in the Divine Comedy”
Published in: “Make It New: The Many Dantes of the Twenty-First Century,” edited by Maria Luisa Ardizzone. Special Issue, Studj romanzi. Nuova serie 19 (2023): 17-46.
Mystical Theology and Renaissance Platonism in the Time of Cusanus
Essays in Honor of Donald F. Duclow. Edited by Jason Aleksander, Sean Hannan, Joshua Hollmann, and Michael Moore
Nicholas of Cusa and Times of Transition
Essays in Honor of Gerald Christianson. Edited by Thomas M. Izbicki, Jason Aleksander, and Donald F. Duclow.
“Faith as Poiesis in Nicholas of Cusa’s Pursuit of Wisdom”
Published in Nicholas of Cusa in Ages of Transition, edited by Thomas Izbicki, Jason Aleksander, and Donald Duclow, 197-218. Leiden: E. J. Brill, 2018
“Intellectual Virtues and Attention to Kairos in Maimonides and Dante”
Published in: in The Edinburgh Critical History of Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy, edited by Richard Lee and Andrew Lazella, 234-248. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2020.