Senina T. A. Antilatinskie sochineniia Georgiia Gemista Plifona: teksty i kontekst [Anti-Latin Writings of George Gemistos Plethon: Texts and Context]. Vestnik Ekaterinburgskoi dukhovnoi seminarii — Bulletin of the Ekaterinburg Theological Seminary, 2024, no. 46, pp. 260–286. DOI: https: ... Senina T. A. Antilatinskie sochineniia Georgiia Gemista Plifona: teksty i kontekst [Anti-Latin Writings of George Gemistos Plethon: Texts and Context]. Vestnik Ekaterinburgskoi dukhovnoi seminarii — Bulletin of the Ekaterinburg Theological Seminary, 2024, no. 46, pp. 260–286. DOI: https://doi.org/10.24412/2224-5391-2024-46-260-286 ISSN 2224-5391DOI 10.24412/2224-5391-2024-46-260-286РИНЦ: https://elibrary.ru/contents.asp?id=68531126Posted on site: 24.10.24Текст статьи на сайте Cyberleninka URL: https://cyberleninka.ru/article/n/antilatinskie-sochineniya-georgiya-gemis-ta-plifona-teksty-i-kontekst/viewer (дата обращения 24.10.2024)AbstractThis work presents an analysis and translation with commentaries of the works of George Gemistos Plethon related to the anti-Latin polemic: the treatise “Against the book in defense of the Latin dogma” and a letter to cardinal Bessarion with answers to his objections. The analysis and commentary include an examination of the history of these writings, their theological and historical context, and their relationship to the views of Plethon as a whole. The anti-Latin writings of Plethon, known for his commitment to Platonism and Hellenic religious and philosophical concepts, his participation in the work of the Council of Ferraro-Florence, his support of St. Mark of Ephesus and his criticism of the union aroused particular interest among researchers and led to ambiguous assessments and contradictory interpretations of the personality, views and goals of Gemistos. The work re-examines a number of related issues, in particular, Vojtĕch Hladki’s interpretation that Plethon was a Christian and did not have any neo-pagan circle of followers, and his “Laws” were simply personal notes that did not reflect the actual religious views of the author. It is shown that, despite the formal defense of Orthodoxy at the council and the written treatise against the Filioque, Plethon remained a Platonist, faithful to those non-Christian views that he outlined in the “Laws” and which deeply outraged George Scholarios, then leader of the Orthodox resistance. Plethon used his anti-Latin treatise not just to criticize the Filioque, but to set out the foundations of “Hellenic theology,” which, from the point of view of Gemistos, had a philosophical logic that Christian theology had abandoned. Plethon rejected the union with the Latins not because of his own Orthodox beliefs: from his point of view, the union was useless as a purely human device that could not help the state, and the main sin of the Byzantines, because of which they lost divine help, was unbelief, unlike Turks, into divine providence, which the philosopher understood, like the Stoics, as an inevitable fate.