Franco Volpi (philosopher)
Italian philosopher From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Franco Volpi (Vicenza, 4 October 1952 – 14 April 2009), was a philosopher, historian of philosophy and a professor at Padua University, who wrote regularly to the Italian newspaper La Repubblica. Volpi was an expert in German philosophy, in particular Martin Heidegger and Arthur Schopenhauer. He investigated the relationship between nihilism and the nothing, and between philosophy and current psychology. In one of his works, he wrote that "real philosophical questions have a history but have no answer".[1] For him, nihilism undermines truth, weakens religion and dissolves dogmatism.[2]
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Volpi also taught at the University of Witten/Herdecke as well as the universities of Laval, Poitiers and Nice.[3]
Volpi died on 14 April 2009, at the age of 56, after being run over by an automobile as he rode his bicycle.[4]
Works
- Heidegger e Brentano. L'aristotelismo e il problema dell'univocità dell'essere nella formazione filosofica del giovane Martin Heidegger, Cedam, Padova, 1976, pp. 144
- "La rinascita della filosofia pratica in Germania", in:Filosofia pratica e scienza politica, Francisci, Abano/Padova, 1980, pp. 180 (with Carlo Natali, Laura Iseppi, Claudio Pacchiani)
- "Sulla fortuna del concetto di decadence nella cultura tedesca: Nietzsche e le sue fonti francesi", Filosofia politica, 1995
- Lexikon der philosophischen Werke, Kröner, Stuttgart, 1988
- Guida a Heidegger, Laterza, Roma-Bari 1997, 1998, pp. XVI-387
- Hegel e i suoi critici, Per i licei e gli istituti magistrali, Laterza, Roma-Bari 1998
- Il nichilismo,[5]
- Heidegger e Aristotele, Daphne, Padova, 1984, pp. 226 (ristampa Bari, Laterza, 2010)
References
Sources
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