scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessBook

The Philosophy of Giambattista Vico

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In the last 25 years Vico's ideas about history, language, anti-Cartesian epistemology, and rhetoric have begun to receive the recognition their admirers have long claimed they deserve as discussed by the authors.
Abstract
Giambattista Vico (1668-1744) is often regarded as the beleaguered, neglected genius of pre-Enlightenment Naples. His work - though known to Herder, Coleridge, Matthew Arnold, and Michelet - widely and deeply appreciated only during the twentieth century. Although Vico may be best known for the use James Joyce made of his theories in Finnegans Wake, Croce's insightful analysis of Vico's ideas played a large role in alerting readers to his unique voice. Croce's volume preceded Joyce's creation of "Mr. John Baptister Vickar" by a quarter century. During the last 25 years Vico's ideas about history, language, anti-Cartesian epistemology, and rhetoric have begun to receive the recognition their admirers have long claimed they deserve. Increasing numbers of publications appear annually which bear the stamp of Vico's thinking. Even if he is not yet so renowned as some of his contemporaries, such as Locke. Voltaire, or Montesquieu, there are good reasons to believe that in the future he will be equally honored as a cultural theorist. As a theorist of historical process and its language, there is no more innovative voice than his until the twentieth century - which explains in part why such figures as Joyce and R.G. Collingwood freely drew on Vico's work, particularly his New Science, while creating their own. If Vico was Naples' most brilliant, if uncelebrated, citizen prior to the Enlightenment taking hold in Southern Italy, then Croce (1866-1952) is surely the city's most important thinker of modern times, and the single indispensable Italian philosopher since Vico's death. When a genius of Croce's interpretative prowess, evaluates the work of another, it is inevitable that an explosive mixture will result. A great virtue of this book is its fusion of Croce's unique brand of idealism and aesthetic philosophy with Vico's epistemological, ethical, and historical theories. If Vico's theory of cyclical changes in history remains fruitful, it might be argued that Croce's evaluation of his countryman' ideas represented the next turn of the philosophical wheel toward enlightenment.

read more

Citations
More filters
Book

The Dialogical Mind: Common Sense and Ethics

TL;DR: In this paper, Markova presents an ethics of dialogicality as an alternative to the narrow perspective of individualism and cognitivism that has traditionally dominated the field of social psychology.
BookDOI

The Cambridge history of eighteenth-century political thought

TL;DR: The Cambridge History of Political Thought as mentioned in this paper provides a comprehensive overview of the development of western political thought during the European Enlightenment, including Rousseau, Montesquieu and David Hume.
Book

A History of Modern Aesthetics

TL;DR: German Aesthetics in the Second Half of the Twentieth Century: 1. German aesthetics between the wars: Lukacs and Heidegger 2. In the wake of Schelling 3. The high tide of idealism 4. The second wave as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Textual criticism in Indology and in European philology during the 19th and 20th centuries

TL;DR: This paper discusses the post-enlightenment development of philology in Europe during the 19th-20th centuries, particularly in the German speaking areas, and discusses at some length the recent development of computer-based stemmatics that use biology-inspired computer programs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Recovering hyperbole: Re-imagining the limits of rhetoric for an age of excess

TL;DR: The authors argue that hyperbole is often the most effective way of trying to express seemingly impossible and inexpressible positions and argue for the reexploration and critical examination of hyperbole, and offer a theoretical framework from which to view texts and discourse from a hyperbolic perspective.