Decrypted: Musica Universalis in the Textual Architecture of the “Commedia”
C. S. Adoyo, Georgetown University
For seven centuries scholars have speculated about the structural design of Dante’s Commedia but remain perplexed by the poem’s comprehensive architecture. This study undertakes a strictly empirical quantitative analysis of Dante’s magnum opus to address this lacuna. The outcome of this analysis enumerates the correspondence between the foundational rationale of the Commedia’s textual architecture and both physical and metaphysical concepts of Ptolemaic cosmology and Pythagorean principles of harmony and proportion as described by Boethius. The poem manifests a musically and mathematically meticulous design conceptualized as musica universalis and expressed as musica instrumentalis that echoes Paschal and Marian plainchant. With an analytical synthesis of three components—Beatrice’s mathematical identity, the Trinitary ontology of the terza rima, and the quantitative properties of the Commedia’s canto lengths and their frequency of occurrence—this study decrypts Dante’s comprehensive architectural design of a poem whose structural harmony continues to be felt by readers today.
Keywords: Trinity, Scutum fidei, Terza rima, Architecture, Boethius, Pythagoras, Ptolemy
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