From Kant to Croce : : Modern Philosophy in Italy 1800-1950 / / Rebecca Copenhaver, Brian PA. Copenhaver.

From around 1800, shortly before Pasquale Galluppi's first book, until 1950, just before Benedetto Croce died, the most formative influences on Italian philosophers were Kant and the post-Kantians, especially Hegel. In many ways, the Italian philosophers of this period lived in turbulent but cr...

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Superior document:Title is part of eBook package: De Gruyter UTP eBook-Package Backlist 2000-2015
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Place / Publishing House:Toronto : : University of Toronto Press, , [2016]
©2011
Year of Publication:2016
Language:English
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Physical Description:1 online resource
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Table of Contents:
  • Frontmatter
  • Contents
  • Preface and Acknowledgments
  • PART I. Introduction
  • 1. A Strange History (Bobbio I)
  • 2. Idealism and Sensism (Rosmini I)
  • 3. Philosophies Imported and Contested (Galluppi I)
  • 4. Experience and Ideology (Galluppi II)
  • 5. Restoration and Reaction (Rosmini II)
  • 6. The Mother Idea (Rosmini III)
  • 7. Primacy (Gioberti I)
  • 8. The Ideal Formula (Gioberti II)
  • 9. A Natural Method (Mamiani)
  • 10. Revolution and Recirculation (Spaventa)
  • 11. Facts and Laws (Villari)
  • 12. Real and Ideal (De Sanctis)
  • 13. Resurgence (Fiorentino and Florenzi Waddington)
  • 14. Matter and Idea (Labriola)
  • 15. No Speculative Movement (Barzellotti)
  • 16. A Revelation (Croce I)
  • 17. History under Art (Croce II)
  • 18. What Is Distinct? (Croce III)
  • 19. What Is Living? (Croce IV)
  • 20. What Is Dead? (Croce V)
  • 21. Materialism (Gentile I)
  • 22. Idealism (Gentile II)
  • 23. Actualism (Gentile III)
  • 24. Manifestos (Croce and Gentile)
  • 25. Common Sense and Good Sense (Gramsci I)
  • 26. The Religion of Liberty (Croce VI)
  • 27. Philosophy in Prison (Gramsci II)
  • 28. Still a Strange History (Bobbio II)
  • Notes to Part I
  • PART II. Translations
  • 1. Baron Pasquale Galluppi of Tropea. Elements of Philosophy
  • 2. Antonio Rosmini. A Sketch of Modern Philosophy
  • 3. Vincenzo Gioberti. The Moral and Political Primacy of the Italians
  • 4. Vincenzo Gioberti. Introduction to the Study of Philosophy
  • 5. Count Terenzio Mamiani della Rovere. The Renewal of the Ancestral Italian Philosophy
  • 6. Bertrando Spaventa. The Character and Development of Italian Philosophy from the Sixteenth Century Until Our Time
  • 7. Pasquale Villari. Positive Philosophy and Historical Method
  • 8. Francesco De Sanctis. The Principle of Realism
  • 9. Francesco De Sanctis. The Ideal
  • 10. Marianna Bacinetti Florenzi Waddington. Pantheism as the Foundation of the True and the Good
  • 11. Marianna Bacinetti Florenzi Waddington. Remarks on Pantheism: The Infinite, the Finite, God, and Man
  • 12. Francesco Fiorentino. Letters on The New Science to the Marchesa Florenzi Waddington
  • 13. Francesco Fiorentino. Positivism and Idealism
  • 14. Antonio Labriola. History, Philosophy of History, Sociology, and Historical Materialism
  • 15. Benedetto Croce. History Brought Under the General Concept of Art
  • 16. Benedetto Croce. Logic as Science of the Pure Concept
  • 17. Benedetto Croce. What Is Living and What Is Dead in the Philosophy of Hegel
  • 18. Giovanni Gentile. The Philosophy of Praxis
  • 19. Giovanni Gentile. The Rebirth of Idealism
  • 20. Giovanni Gentile. The Act of Thinking as Pure Act
  • 21. Giovanni Gentile. The Foundations of Actual Idealism
  • 22. Manifesto of the Fascist Intellectuals
  • 23. A Reply by Italian Authors, Professors, and Journalists to the 'Manifesto' of the Fascist Intellectuals
  • 24. Antonio Gramsci. Notebooks: 11 (1932−3), Introduction to the Study of Philosophy
  • 25. Benedetto Croce. History of Europe in the Nineteenth Century: Epilogue
  • 26. Antonio Gramsci. Letters from Prison
  • References and Abbreviations
  • Name Index
  • General Index