Giacomo Barzellotti (philosopher)

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Giacomo Barzellotti (7 July 1844 – 19 September 1917) was an Italian philosopher and Senator.[1]

Biography

Giacomo Barzellotti was born in Florence. Ar first a pupil of Terenzio Mamiani and Augusto Conti, both spiritualist philosophers, Barzellotti then professed to be a follower of Neo-Kantianism. He was mainly interested in the history of philosophy with particular regard to the problems of artistic and religious psychology. He had the chair of Moral Philosophy at the University of Pavia in 1881 and Naples in 1887. In 1896, Barzellotti became professor of History of Philosophy at the University of Rome. He was admitted to the Lincean Academy in 1899. In 1908, he was appointed Senator of the Kingdom of Italy.[2]

He was initiated into Freemasonry in the Lodge Concordia of Florence, belonging to the Grand Orient of Italy.[3]

Works

  • La Morale nella Filosofia Positiva (1871)
  • La Rivoluzione e la Letteratura in Italia: Avanti e dopo gli anni 1848 e 1849 (1875)
  • La Nuova Scuola del Kant e la Filosofia Scientifica Contemporanea in Germania (1880)
  • David Lazzaretti di Arcidosso (detto il Santo) (1884; reprinted as Monte Amiata e il suo Pofeta, 1909)
  • Santi, Solitari, Filosofi: Saggi Psicologici (1886)
  • Studi e Ritratti (1893)
  • Ippolito Taine (1895)[4]
  • L'Opera Storica della Filosofia (1918)

Notes

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External links

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  1. From June 22, 1908 to September 19, 1917.
  2. Cappelletti, Virginia (1970). "Giacomo Barzellotti." In: Dizionario biografico degli italiani, Vol. 7. Roma: Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana.
  3. Gnocchini, Vittorio (2005). L'Italia dei Liberi Muratori. Roma: Erasmo, p. 26.
  4. Translated into French in the same year. See La Philosophie de H. Taine. Paris: Félix Alcan (1895).