Matteo Johannes Stettler

Alma Mater Studiorum - Università Di Bologna
  •  37
    Recent scholarship has repeatedly highlighted a significant flaw in Giorgio Agamben’s Remnants of Auschwitz : its inability to account for acts of resistance in the Lager, or its aprioristic closure to the very possibility of such acts. As a result, instead of clarifying ‘the sense and reasons’ behind the behaviour of both executioners and victims of the Shoah, as his work initially sets out to do, Agamben’s analysis ends up rendering their conduct even more enigmatic and unintelligible. To addr…Read more
  •  42
    The reception of Hadot’s work on the tradition of spiritual exercises among historians of medieval philosophy has rarely produced the results one might reasonably have expected. In this revisitation of the historiography on the notion of “intellectual felicity,” I thus hope to be able first to provide a corrective to the faulty understanding that some medievalists still seem to have of Hadot’s contribution to the study of philosophy as a way of life in the Middle Ages, and second, to show how on…Read more
  •  67
    Thoreau’s Stoicism in Letters to Various Persons: The Spiritual Direction of Harrison Blake
    Journal of Speculative Philosophy 37 (2): 165-196. 2023.
    In the present contribution, the author contends, first, that “the perfect piece of Stoicism” that Emerson wanted to make out of Thoreau’s philosophical correspondence with his disciple Harrison Blake in Letters to Various Persons (1865) was neither concerned with a personality stereotype, as Sophia Thoreau feared, nor with the specifically Stoic way of living, as Richardson and Risinger have claimed in response. This first edition of Thoreau’s correspondence was in fact meant to be representati…Read more
  •  82
    Chapter II of Foucault’s The Care of the Self, ‘The Cultivation of the Self,’ is arguably one of the most controversial sections of the entire History of Sexuality. The diatribe over this chapter was initially mounted by Pierre Hadot’s critical essay ‘Reflections on the Idea of the ‘Cultivation of the Self.” Therein, Hadot objects to Foucault’s dissolution of the Stoic doctrinal antinomy between voluptas (‘pleasure’) and gaudium (‘joy’) and, thereby, to the relegation of the latter notion to the…Read more
  •  121
    Of Cartesianism and Spiritual Exercises
    Philosophy Today 66 (3): 471-489. 2022.
    This article challenges the recurrent critique that Pierre Hadot’s identification of ancient philosophy with the practice of spiritual exercises introduces a non- or irrational dimension into metaphilosophy. The occasion to do this is provided by Kerem Eksen’s recent reading of Descartes’s Meditations as consisting of solely intellectual, rather than spiritual, exercises—since the latter, Eksen claims, involve extrarational means and ends. Part 2 presents an alternative account of the role of co…Read more