L’eterno raffreddore di Tarquinia Molza. Natura e storia delle catastrofi nell’opera di Francesco Patrizi da Cherso

The process that leads to the degeneration of a body, a political system or any other form of cultural organisation may seem inevitable. Yet, according to Francesco Patrizi da Cherso (1529-1597), there are ways to minimise its consequences. In this contribution, starting with the strange case of the...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Michele Merlicco
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: École Normale Supérieure de Lyon Editions 2023-03-01
Series:Laboratoire Italien
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/laboratoireitalien/9350
Description
Summary:The process that leads to the degeneration of a body, a political system or any other form of cultural organisation may seem inevitable. Yet, according to Francesco Patrizi da Cherso (1529-1597), there are ways to minimise its consequences. In this contribution, starting with the strange case of the eternal cold of Tarquinia Molza, we will trace the history of the concept of catastrophe in Patrizi’s philosophy, focusing in particular on the different forms of “corruption” that punctuate the life of a single body as much as that of the entire universe. Based on the reading of three texts composed over a period of more than forty years –the Città felice (1553), the Dialoghi della historia (1560) and the Paralleli militari (1594-1595)– we will discover how the conceptual dimension of catastrophe, from Patrizi’s point of view, oscillates between nature, history and myth, and how, in a complicated interweaving of medicine, history and philosophy, Patrizi seeks the conditions for mankind to foresee (and thus, to some extent, control) the unalterable course of nature and adapt to it.
ISSN:1627-9204
2117-4970