Flavio Baroncelli: A Personal Recollection

Flavio Baroncelli was a formidable philosopher, albeit an unusual—and even "disquieting"—one. His work is well known in Italy, but little known in other countries. The obvious explanation for this is that Flavio wrote and published almost exclusively in Italian. And that was no accident, f...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mikael M. Karlsson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The University of Akureyri 2008-03-01
Series:Nordicum-Mediterraneum
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1946/1538
Description
Summary:Flavio Baroncelli was a formidable philosopher, albeit an unusual—and even "disquieting"—one. His work is well known in Italy, but little known in other countries. The obvious explanation for this is that Flavio wrote and published almost exclusively in Italian. And that was no accident, for he knew English well and could easily have written much more in English in order to raise his international profile. But for Flavio, the Italian language was a basic philosophical instrument. He employed a great deal of straightforward (and clever) analytical argument. But he also argued (like Nietzsche) by means of humor, irony, story-telling and various forms of linguistic artistry. For this, he needed Italian, in which language he was a master craftsman.
ISSN:1670-6242