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Home » Great Books #10: Dante’s Hierarchy of Hell w/ Prof. Jiang (Transcript) 

Great Books #10: Dante’s Hierarchy of Hell w/ Prof. Jiang (Transcript) 

Editor’s Notes: In this session, Prof. Jiang provides a comprehensive overview of Dante’s Inferno, detailing the intricate hierarchy of Hell and the philosophical reasoning behind its structure. The discussion delves into Dante’s unique cosmology, exploring how the concepts of sin, free will, and unconditional love serve as the driving forces that either bind a soul to suffering or allow it to ascend toward the divine. By examining key figures like Count Ugolino and the ultimate paradoxes found at the center of the abyss, this lecture reveals how Dante uses the journey through the afterlife as a profound meditation on the human imagination and the necessity of self-forgiveness. (April 29, 2026) 

TRANSCRIPT:

Welcome to Hell

PROFESSOR JIANG: Welcome to hell. So we finished Dante’s Inferno today and so what I’m going to do is I’m going to give you the overview of how Dante constructs hell, the Inferno, and I’ll explain to you his reasoning for the structure.

Dante’s Cosmology: God and Our Relationship with the Divine

So the first thing I want to do is explain to you Dante’s cosmology, how he understands God and our relationship with God. So God in Dante is really the monad of Plato, okay? For Plato, God or the monad is eternal, perfect, and immutable. It has always been there, it will always be there. It is perfect and it will never ever change.

This creates a problem for the universe though because if something is perfect, it cannot be creative. It lacks an imagination. It knows everything, there’s nothing for it to learn, okay? So it lacks an imagination. Without imagination, the problem is the universe cannot expand, it cannot renew itself, it cannot rejuvenate.

So to solve this problem, what God does is create us, okay, humans. Because the problem with humans is that we exist in three different planes, okay? There is the ethereal, the spiritual, and the material, okay? So we’re existing in multiple dimensions. And when we exist in the material, we have bodies, right? And these bodies create pain and pleasure. We can also die. And as a result, we can sin.

Sin, okay? What allows us to sin is free will. What’s important to sin though is that you can now be creative, you can now take risks, you can now be imaginative. What’s important in this process is to redeem yourself, to forgive yourself. The problem then is, okay, if we can sin, we can do whatever we want, how do we know what is good and what is evil?

The Divine Spark Within Us

And the solution to this is this. Because when God created us, he breathed into us life. That’s what it says in the Bible. Therefore, there is a spark in us that is divine, okay? So we’re humans, and there’s a spark in us that is divine. All right? I’m sorry for the bad drawing, okay? I’m not an artist. But there’s a spark in us that’s divine, and it is called love.

So God is love, and when we love, the spark in us awakens and it grows. So how does this thing grow and glow? The answer is when we love someone else, okay? All right? Because the thing about the spark is that it wants to return to the source, okay? It wants to return to God, and that’s what drives us. This eternal compulsion to return to the source of who we are, even though we’ve forgotten who we are, okay?

So the way to do this is we cannot return to the source in our world, but we can love someone else. Not money, not our pet, not a computer, but someone else. It has to be someone else, because only in someone else is another spark, okay? So we’re drawn to the spark.

And this is really important. When you love someone else, that person doesn’t have to love you back, okay? Because love is about giving. And when you love giving, it is giving. And someone has to receive, okay? So when a mother loves a child, it doesn’t matter if the child loves her back. All that matters is that she loves him or her unconditionally. And when that happens, when that happens, the spark in us glows. When it glows, it reconnects back to the source, all right?

So the moment we choose to love someone unconditionally, this glows and it grows and returns us to the source. What happens now is this. It’s really powerful is that when this happens, our understanding of the universe expands, because now our view is more cosmic. It’s more global than before. We leave ourselves and we enter into the universe. And this is what empowers the imagination, okay? So this is how Dante understands our purpose. Why we’re here, where we came from, where we’re going.

It is so that we can, so that our compulsion, our will and desire, it is always to return to the source. To do so, we have to love someone else, okay? In the process of loving someone else, this expands our imagination. And so this sounds all a bit confusing, right? So let’s go back and talk about the Odyssey, all right?

The Odyssey as a Model of Love and Imagination

The Odyssey is an epic poem about a family, right? Odysseus, Penelope, and Telemachus. Odysseus has left Penelope and they’re heartbroken. They long to return to each other, okay? They long to return to each other.

During the Trojan War, Odysseus becomes traumatized by the horrors of war. Remember how he constructs the Trojan horse? And he constructs the Trojan horse in order to return to Penelope, right? It is his love for Penelope that expands his imagination, that allows him to conceive of the Trojan horse.

The Trojan horse allows the Greeks to destroy Troy, but it traumatizes Odysseus because he sees for himself how terrible war is. He came to war, he came to Troy, in order to restore a family, right? To restore Menelaus and Helen. But with the Trojan horse, he sees that, no, this is destroying families because the Trojans are being killed and their wives are being enslaved.