IMHICIHU   13380
INSTITUTO MULTIDISCIPLINARIO DE HISTORIA Y CIENCIAS HUMANAS
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Outsiders of Hagnopolis: Unbelief, Fear, and Religion in Thomas More's Utopia
Autor/es:
DEL OLMO, ISMAEL
Revista:
Moreana
Editorial:
Edinburgh University Press
Referencias:
Lugar: Edinburgh; Año: 2017 vol. 54 p. 57 - 70
ISSN:
0047-8105
Resumen:
This paper deals with unbelief and its relationship with fear and religion in Thomas More?s Utopia. It stresses the fact that Epicurean and radical Aristotelian theses challenged Christian notions about immortality, Providence, and divine Judgement. The examples of Niccolò Machiavelli and Pietro Pomponazzi, contemporaries of More, are set to show an heterodox connection between these theses and the notion of fear of eternal punishment. More?s account of the Utopian religion, on the contrary, distinguishes between human fear and religious fear. This distinction enables him to highlight the threat to spiritual and civic life posed by those who deny the soul and divine retribution.