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Stanford University in Italy
Добавлен 26 сен 2014
Why Stanford in Florence - Q&A for students
Why Stanford in Florence - Q&A for students
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Видео
Fischi per Fiaschi - Blackness in Contemporary Italy - J.R. Thompson
Просмотров 534 года назад
Fischi per Fiaschi - Blackness in Contemporary Italy - J.R. Thompson Full HD short movie Stanford University In Italy December 2020
WEBINAR - "Fischi per Fiaschi: Blackness in Contemporary Italy - Justin R. Thompson
Просмотров 864 года назад
LIVE RECORDED Stanford University in Italy Florence December, 9th, 2020
"What's cooking in Florence" - A Master Class with Chef Vito Mollica
Просмотров 1,3 тыс.4 года назад
"What's cooking in Florence" - A Master Class with Chef Vito Mollica Four Seasons Florence - Il Palagio Restaurant Recorded live during the Zoom Webinars (quality may not be HD) November, 16th, 2020 Stanford In Flroence IG: stanfordinflorence Vito Mollica IG: mollicavita INCONTRI A PALAZZO Live from Florence The Breyer Center for Overseas Studies in Florence Bing Overseas Studies Program Stanfo...
Everything I wish I had known before coming to Florence - STUDENTS' STORIES
Просмотров 914 года назад
Fiona Kim Henderson The Breyer Center for Overseas Studies in Florence Bing Overseas Studies Program Stanford University
The most important things I have learned in Florence - STUDENTS' STORIES
Просмотров 2574 года назад
Dani Elysse Lyle The Breyer Center for Overseas Studies in Florence Bing Overseas Studies Program Stanford University
Advice for those coming to Florence - STUDENTS' STORIES
Просмотров 1564 года назад
Callan Alden Hoskins The Breyer Center for Overseas Studies in Florence Bing Overseas Studies Program Stanford University
Living with an Italian Family - STUDENTS' STORIES
Просмотров 1964 года назад
Aracely Maura Valencia The Breyer Center for Overseas Studies in Florence Bing Overseas Studies Program Stanford University
Everything I wish I had known before coming to Florence - STUDENTS' STORIES
Просмотров 534 года назад
Alyssa Victoria Diaz The Breyer Center for Overseas Studies in Florence Bing Overseas Studies Program Stanford University
The Most Important things I have learned in Florence - STUDENT'S STORIES
Просмотров 464 года назад
Alyssa Victoria Diaz The Breyer Center for Overseas Studies in Florence Bing Overseas Studies Program Stanford University
Diversity in the Bing Overseas Studies Program in Florence
Просмотров 1 тыс.4 года назад
Diversity in the Bing Overseas Studies Program in Florence Video by Olivia Flournoy May, 2020 The Breyer Center for Overseas Studies in Florence Bing Overseas Studies STANFORD UNIVERSITY IN ITALY Via de' Bardi, 36 50125 Firenze ITALY
A conversation with Reid Hoffman and Matteo Renzi
Просмотров 2705 лет назад
A conversation with Reid Hoffman and Matteo Renzi Palazzo Vecchio, Salone dei Cinquecento, September 22nd, 2019 Florence, Italy
STUDENT TALENT SHOW - Highlights -
Просмотров 1195 лет назад
Student Talent Show Highlight Spring 2019 Stanford University Bing Overseas Studies Program The Breyer Center for Overseas Studies in Florence Wednesday, May 15th, 2019
"Machiavelli in the Caribbean and the Art of Power" - Professor Ramon Saldivar
Просмотров 3498 лет назад
"Machiavelli in the Caribbean and the Art of Power" Professor Ramon Saldivar Palazzo Capponi alle Rovinate, Wednesday, May 4th, 2016 The Breyer Center for Overseas Studies in Florence Bing Overseas Studies Program Stanford University
"Clash! How to Thrive in the Multicultural World" - Professor Hazel R. Markus
Просмотров 4938 лет назад
"Clash! How to Thrive in the Multicultural World" Professor Hazel R. Markus Palazzo Capponi, Wednesday, April, 20th, 2016
"Gino Capponi nella Firenze del Risorgimento"
Просмотров 3248 лет назад
"Gino Capponi nella Firenze del Risorgimento"
"Piero della Francesca and the World of the Renaissance Courts"
Просмотров 5098 лет назад
"Piero della Francesca and the World of the Renaissance Courts"
"Reading Race: Schemas, Racial Perception, and the Power of Litterature"
Просмотров 2878 лет назад
"Reading Race: Schemas, Racial Perception, and the Power of Litterature"
"The End of the Line: Gay Rights, Racial Justice, and the U.S. Supreme Court"
Просмотров 1098 лет назад
"The End of the Line: Gay Rights, Racial Justice, and the U.S. Supreme Court"
"A culture viewed through its stories, rituals and foods: writing and translating "The Tequila Worm"
Просмотров 5128 лет назад
"A culture viewed through its stories, rituals and foods: writing and translating "The Tequila Worm"
PUBLIC SERVICE AT STANFORD IN FLORENCE
Просмотров 529 лет назад
PUBLIC SERVICE AT STANFORD IN FLORENCE
"IMAGES OF EVIL IN CRIMINAL LAW" - Professor Michele Papa
Просмотров 2619 лет назад
"IMAGES OF EVIL IN CRIMINAL LAW" - Professor Michele Papa
"Using Sound to Interpret the World Around Us" - Professor Jonathan Berger
Просмотров 1569 лет назад
"Using Sound to Interpret the World Around Us" - Professor Jonathan Berger
"Gino Capponi e il Risorgimento Italiano" - Professor Zeffiro Ciuffoletti
Просмотров 5889 лет назад
"Gino Capponi e il Risorgimento Italiano" - Professor Zeffiro Ciuffoletti
Orientation Retreat in Greve in Chianti
Просмотров 1969 лет назад
Orientation Retreat in Greve in Chianti
"Dante and Florence" Professor Lino Pertile
Просмотров 1 тыс.9 лет назад
"Dante and Florence" Professor Lino Pertile
It can also be viewed from a political perspective. The beauty of it is that it can be applied to the religious, non- religious, political minded, and even the scientific minded
Best
I read the Inferno in High School. I thought I would hate it, but I was wrong. It was incredible. I need to read the rest of the Comedia
Not every person in the world will understand that
The Aforementioned "I don't How I Got Here Line" ..1.10 Io non so ben ridir com' i' v'intrai tant' era pien di sonno a quel punto che la verace via abbandonai. - U - U U U - - U U- U-U U - - U- --U U I don't recall beast I rided to where I arrived than when at which point this sleepy spell afell then fact! the straight path ran short then void
“You found me a servant, and you left me a free man. All that a person can possibly do to save another person, you did for me.” For me, the heart of the Comedy is all in these words. Dante‘s final declaration of love to Beatrice right before the end of the journey, right before meeting God. You have to remember that this whole poem, for all its richness and complexity, was written FOR HER. It was intended, first and foremost, as a love letter to Beatrice. Everything, every single word before that final couple of verses is Dante’s way of leading up to what he has truly wanted to say all along: “thank you for inspiring me, thank you for being the light of my life”. The Divine Comedy as a whole is a declaration of love, a celebration of how much one person, by simply existing, can positively impact the life of another person. This is why it is SO important to read it all. Because, when you get to the Paradiso and specifically to those final words, everything falls into place. Inferno, Purgatorio, Paradiso. It’s just one story, and it’s a love story. Perhaps the greatest humanity has ever told.
Incredibile ! Nessuno interessa la nascita del Risorgimento.
The best introduction to "La Commedia" I ever heard.
Couldn't help but notice that his jacket is two sizes bigger than it has to be.
Thanks, Columbo!
👏👏👏👏
Interesting, but the sound quality is lacking,
John 14:21
Great lecture, but one minor revision: it is Cato the Younger that Dante encounters at the beginning of Purgatorio rather than Cato the Elder.
awesome introduction! I feel a lot more confident now to start reading
The Divine Comedy is the best example of world building I've read or watched, hands down
I think Beatrice only works if she is basically his anima, an abstract idea of the perfect projected onto the projector screen of a person he only knew in part, someone he doesn't know in 360, flaws and all. She had to be someone barely human, someone who exists mainly in his mind.
Beatrice was Dante,s first and ever love till day of his death. Dante first met Beatrice at the age of 9 , they were both the same age, Beatrice died at the age of 26 in a bad way, so she’s not just an imagination in his mind, she was a real person that he truly loved.
I prefer The Decameron.
Ive been fascinated with The Divine Comedy since I was 13 and came upon a book in the library of Gustav Dore's illustrations. But I've come to believe it's 'lessons' are only relevant for deeply believing Catholics, and those who believe in eternal fire and punishments. Virgil himself would not have believed in much of this concept of afterlife and hellish retributions.
Dante chosen Virgilio just because he came from a previous culture, because that's the meaning of humanism and renaissance. The medieval christian culture is fundamental to understand, likewise many other aspects. But the lesson is universal, because it's more about human sentiments and philosophy. For example he mentioned Mohamed, and he was 'forced' to put it in the inferno part, but Dante still recognizes his value. And, among the others, there's also a scientific layer of interpretation, because Dante used references without even knowing. The journey is obviously spiritual, but it's not a simple religious path, it's the story of our life, from the afterlife perspective. When they say it's universal, trust that: in the end of the Comedy, there's love as the god, not god as the love. Even if we don't care about religion, we can relate, because Dante's critics is toward everything, even religious hypocrisy.
Aeneas meeting Dido in the underworld isn't every bit terrible. What about when his own dead father leads Aeneas through gate of false dreams dismissing one of truth. The Aeneid literally ends in the instant of brutal murder when mercy was seriously considered mere lines before.
'In the middle of my life I find myself in a dark wood... ...but since I got some good there, I must tell you about the bad as well...'
What does the second book of maccabees have to do with Muslims???
This is a genius lecture on Dante, thanks 🙏
It's not Dante, but still pretty good m.ruclips.net/p/PLiCoO2FHdEP5KH-BbbChTiGFOaY_bVNmh
Superb.
A tremendous lecture with brilliant content and delivery
Excellent lecture
Really good speaker but his suit jacket is way too big for him. He looks like a kid dressing up in his parent's clothes.
Everyone needs to know this
This guy isn't worthy of carrying Mark Vernon's jockstrap.
what an amazing talk, able to speak of this within the cultural context that it was written
Ou, I bumped into this while beeing half way through the Inferno.. and I find this tremendously helpful already. Thank you sire, I hope you are very well.
Very nice awsome😇🤑🤑
47B.C... and they call themselves atheists 🖕😎👎
23:00.....with no ‘proper’ educational schooling, I understand, directions degrees dimensions for/from within all are given to receive, show-shine free will to believe , through fear will grieve to accept and relieve.. eventually event invent a new u through duality in unity -you will see, all life living harmoniously naturally ... eventually invent unity intentionally collectively universally ascending consciously 💗🙏🏼💫☯️🍀
Bravo 👏
Love this guy's passion and clarity of thought. Bravo.
great lecture and insight. I have been reading " Comedia" with a friend, whose great research adds alot to all the characters we encountered in Inferno, Purgatorio, and now in Paradiso. We have about 20 cantos left to finish the great poem. I reccomend reading with a friend. Thank you professor Cook for a great lecture.
3:15 🥵
14:13 He's wrong. Sin is something imposed on us by God, and we are unable to resist, or fight it, so that we are forced to beg for something we could never have. For that, I tell God every day to screw himself, to take this planet and shove it.
it's amazing you believe such things.
"Journeying up the seven story mountain... that by the way, Dante largely invented." FYI purgatory is invented.
Lecture starts at 3:11
Dankie
Thanks, my dude
Thanks for that.
Watch ,,.,THE LADY OF HEAVEN Movie trailer 🎬👌,,, and thank you
Great, but can't people speak like normal people, is Cook on amphetamines?
sorry, I am not enjoying it. Pls watch Yale Dante ‘Inferno’ lectures. You will love them. Done by rreal Italian professor. - NYC, 6/29/2021
THANK YOU!!! 100%
Such a great introduction, I can't wait to hear myself speak. Well, his talk is great.
religious brainwashing mumbo jumbo 👎👎
The panicky patient gully identify because road explicitly snow within a lacking myanmar. slim, coordinated layer
Just liked this video as the 666th person
I don't know, you guys can call me crazy, but I'm so tired of these intellectuals providing so much context and so much explanations and attempts to relate the contents of a book to our personal lives, and talk in all these verbose terms about life, death, destiny, sin... in the end everything has a context and a lecture like all these can be made about anything, really. Probably in 500 years, if there are people still around, there will be guys conceptualizing the metaphysics of guys in the past going to burger king to eat fast food, and the outlook they had on life back then, how they had to fill with fat their lack of purpose, etc. That's what contemporary artists do to sell the shit they create, fill its emptiness with words and concepts that are really not there. I just got extremely disappointed by the Divine Comedy, probably I had too high expectations. I appreciate the way it's written, although it's unnecessarily long and repetitive in my opinion, just to convey a sense of legitimacy by insistence and repetition. It's probably the standards of the time it was written, but to me it's just a demonstration by Dante of his capacity to write metaphors all the time to the point it's unbearable and over the top. Like every other sentence has a metaphor longer than what the sentence could actually be said in regular language. Of course many of you will feel sorry for how uncultivated I am to not appreciate such literary beauty, etc. But I can't avoid thinking that this is just a trick by him to give credibility to what he says by covering in a beautiful envelope, behind which there is not much really. I think the great value of this work is the detailed depiction of these three realms, and how it has influenced our vision of them, since no one had taken the time and effort so far to describe them so thoroughly. And since at the time of writing religion was taken much more seriously by many more people than it is today, it was foreseeable that this work would have a great impact before writing it. That's where I think the real genius by Dante is, in knowing it was going to be a work to be studied for so many people forever, that he used it as a way to criticize and attack people from his time, presenting them as sinners, as well as presenting himself as such a pure being that was allowed to be taken to God's presence while he was still not dead. In this maneuver of propaganda he was self proclaiming himself as a kind of heavenly creature brought to earth, whose biggest sin is at some point to be too innocent to don't understand some intricacies of Heaven and Hell, as well as presenting his (I guess) enemies in life as the worst sinners (what a coincidence that half of Hell is filled with florentines he knew from his lifetime, although people from all eras and all places should be there). I think this was his master move, that thanks to his book he remains like a heavenly hero in the collective unconscious, more than like yet another poet from the ancient times, and his rivals as the worst and most worthless sinners in history. And there is nothing they could do about it, since the only proper reply would require them to write a similar book countering the comedy. Apparently some of the ones mentioned were already dead at the time of writing, some others were still alive. But as for the actual philosophical content in the book, or actual new knowledge, I would say there is nothing there. Just beautiful, creative, and obscure at times, metaphors to hide the lack of substance, and repeating the core concepts of Christianity with his personal touch. I found nice and interesting the brevity with which he describes God at the end of the book. But yeah, anyway, nice lecture. Ok, now you guys can start insulting me.
I hear you brother! Feel the same way! You write brilliantly!
I totally understand your perception but I must have read the book with different lenses that day
You missed a thing...he himself invented italian let's say in the "De vulgari eloquentia" you can really tell that he is researching for the best dialect in all italy and so on and on so he and Manzoni are the two people that "created italian" and they were not wrong. I want to give to you a little curiosity...Manzoni used instead of the "giovani" used today in italian he believed that the correct form will be "giovine" it's a staggering one error in all the "promessi sposi".
this is good.
Hoping that after a year you may have discovered a more accessible, less verbose translation to read. Too many translators (and scholars) are distracted with their own voices. I recommend the Singleton translation in English. It is in plain language and does not attempt to rhyme. I notice from your RUclips site that Spanish may be your heart's language - there are Spanish translations, but I can't recommend one over another. An audible version in Italian may suit you, as well. Best wishes.
uh
Inconceivable!