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1Perceiving subject and social cognition. Remarks from Adolf Reinach, Shaun Gallagher and Dan ZahaviPhenomenology and Mind 1 182-188. 2011.This paper deals with what Shaun Gallagher and Dan Zahavi call “the social cognition” from the chapter How we know others in their book The Phenomenological Mind (Gallagher, Zahavi 2008), and what Adolf Reinach calls the “extraneous perception” in his university course Einleitung in die Philosophie (Reinach 1913) – that is, the possibility of intersubjectivity, according to these authors. My objective is to show how Gallagher and Zahavi’s analyses could profit from that of Reinach. I find that R…Read more
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14IntroductionIn Tonino Griffero & Marco Tedeschini (eds.), Atmosphere and Aesthetics: A Plural Perspective, Springer Verlag. pp. 1-7. 2019.This chapter has two different parts. The editors, firstly, provide some of the reasons motivating this book project, which has been conceived and planned to give an account of the widespread interest gained by the ordinary concept of “atmosphere” in the last twenty years. “Atmosphere” has been more and more subsumed by the human and social sciences, thereby becoming a technical notion. In this broader context, the editors, secondly, aim at showing and inquiring into the tight relationship betwe…Read more
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33Atmosphere and Taste, Individual and EnvironmentIn Tonino Griffero & Marco Tedeschini (eds.), Atmosphere and Aesthetics: A Plural Perspective, Springer Verlag. pp. 265-285. 2019.The relationship between the human being and their environment has been investigated in many ways during the twentieth century. In this chapter, I will address the topic by focusing on the way that has conceived of such relationship in terms of atmosphere. I will claim that, in order to provide a proper clarification of the human-environment relationship, the concept of “atmosphere” has to refer to that of “taste”. First of all, I will wonder whether these two concepts are incompatible. Second, …Read more
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39Il ripugnante: oltraggio e contraddizioneLebenswelt. Aesthetics and Philosophy of Experience 17. 2022.For the past twenty years, the relationship between politics, morality and disgust has been resolved into a denunciation of the injustices perpetrated in the name of this emotion. However, no compelling reasons have been brought forward to release the suspicion that the condemnation is merely a corollary of the dominant liberal ideology. I will exemplify this weakness by analysing the theory of disgust proposed by Debra Lieberman and Carlton Patrick in 2018. I will offer a different empirical ba…Read more
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42On the good life of disgust. L’ésthetique du stercoraire and the postmodern societyLebenswelt: Aesthetics and Philosophy of Experience 3 200-225. 2013.Starting from a debate which took place at the beginning of the twenty-first century between Jean Clair and Arthur C. Danto, we will focus on the link between art and disgust, because we wish to show what art is now ‘doing’ with disgust. Our hypothesis is that art is part of the general process of self-reshaping that is underway in today’s capitalist societies. Therefore, by commenting Aurel Kolnai’s phenomenological analysis of disgust, we will gain the tools to try to show how disgust could be…Read more
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49B. Riado, Le je-ne-sais-quoiLebenswelt: Aesthetics and Philosophy of Experience 2 219-221. 2012.
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38D. Seron, Ce que voir veut direLebenswelt: Aesthetics and Philosophy of Experience 2 222-226. 2012.
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26Il mostro è un paradossoStudi di Estetica 20. 2021.What is a “Monster”? In the first part of my paper, I answer this question by delving into the historical changes that the concept of “monster” underwent in Western culture along with centuries. I claim that what we call “monster” had been the object of an “integral gaze” since its origin, while, during the 19th Century, it has become the object of a “disintegrated gaze”. What I mean with “integral gaze” is that we look at and understand something in one sole way: the monster exceeds the natural…Read more
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51Daniel Mourenza, Walter Benjamin and the Aesthetics of film Amsterdam University Press, Amsterdam, 2020, pp. 258Studi di Estetica 19. 2021.
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80Atmosphere and Aesthetics: A Plural Perspective (edited book)Springer Verlag. 2019.This book provides a presentation of the concept of “atmosphere” in the realm of aesthetics. An “atmosphere” is meant to be an emotional space. Such idea of “atmosphere” has been more and more subsumed by human and social sciences in the last twenty years, thereby becoming a technical notion. In many fields of the Humanities, affective life has been reassessed as a proper tool to understand the human being, and is now considered crucial. In this context, the link between atmospheres and aestheti…Read more
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50A Danger to a Just Society? A Holistic view on DisgustLebenswelt. Aesthetics and Philosophy of Experience 15 90-113. 2020.In this paper, I consider the relationship that obtains between disgust and the idea of a just society. _Contra_ Martha C. Nussbaum, who argues that disgust poses dangers to a just society, I contend that disgust can either damage or promote the construction of a just society. In fact, I largely agree with Nussbaum’s perspective on disgust, except for this point: disgust, I think, is not necessarily dangerous for a just society, but can also be useful and constitute an important element for its …Read more
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37C. Malabou, Changer de différence. Le féminin et la question philosophiqueLebenswelt: Aesthetics and Philosophy of Experience 1 183-187. 2011.
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39J. Rancière, Le spectateur émancipéLebenswelt: Aesthetics and Philosophy of Experience 1 188-191. 2011.
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From Phenomenology to Formal Ontology: How Barry Smith and Kevin Mulligan Made Husserl’s Descriptive Psychology into a Form of RealismArchivio Di Filosofia 83 (3): 177-188. 2015.In this paper I will discuss Barry Smith’s and Kevin Mulligan’s revision of Husserl’s phenomenology, starting from the fact that many Italian scholars seem to follow them in a sense, by dealing with phenomenology as a sort of a priori ontology. Therefore, I will first reconstruct Smith’s and Mulligan’s attempt and its objectives, then I will show how it is rooted in the school of Brentano and, in particular, in Husserl’s phenomenology. Finally, I will provide some arguments against this attempt …Read more
Areas of Specialization
| Aesthetics |
| Ontology |
| Adolf Reinach |
| Disgust |
Areas of Interest
| Aesthetics |
| Ontology |
| Theories of Emotion |
| Varieties of Emotion |
| Edmund Husserl |