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Displaying: 121-140 of 251 documents

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121. New Vico Studies: Volume > 22
Donald Phillip Verene Vico’s Addition to the Tree of the Poetic Sciences and His Use of the Muses: A Commentary
122. New Vico Studies: Volume > 22
Charles A. Cramer, Kim T. Grant La démarche poétique from Vico to Surrealism
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We examine significant parallels between Surrealist art theory and Vico’s understanding of primitive metaphor, centering on a 1933 article on Vico by the Czech Surrealist Zdenko Reich, who recognized that Vico’s understanding of primitive thought shared notable similarities with the Surrealists’ intent to effect an epistemological revolution by re-establishing poetic thought as the central mode of human understanding. The Surrealists sought to undermine the rationalist assumptions of Western philosophy and revive the “poetic ideas of the first men” through the use of disjunctive juxtaposition, a technique Reich identified with Vichian primitive metaphor. Also like Vico, Reich and the Surrealists stressed the concrete and sensory foundations of thought as revealed in language, and saw the human body as the primary mediating vehicle of poetic thought. In this regard the Surrealists can be seen as effecting a complete embrace of Vico’s concept of metaphor in their attempt to re-organize reality on poetic terms.
123. New Vico Studies: Volume > 22
Molly Black Verene Update: Publications on Vico in English, 2003–2004
124. New Vico Studies: Volume > 22
Rebecca A. Collins An Ontological Constructionist Interpretation of Vico’s Philosophy of History
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This article argues that Vico’s theory of history should be construed as an ontological constructionist account as opposed to its usual realist interpretation. In support of this interpretation I draw upon two important concepts issuing from the body of the Scienza nuova: the notion of ‘‘storia’’ and the verum ipsum factum principle. Both concepts are not only consistent with an ontological constructionist interpretation of Vico’s theory of history but function as powerful explanatory devices in the context of such an interpretation. I show the advantage this interpretation holds for overcoming one of the main charges brought against the Scienza nuova when it is interpreted as presenting a realist conception of history. In highlighting the possibility and, indeed, textual advantages of construing Vico’s theory of history as an ontological constructionist account I claim that Vico may have anticipated the constructionist tradition by some 200 years and may be considered as the founder of constructionism in the philosophy of history.
125. New Vico Studies: Volume > 23
John D. Schaeffer On the Constancy of the Jurisprudent: Translator’s Preface
126. New Vico Studies: Volume > 23
Giambattista Vico On the Constancy of the Jurisprudent
127. New Vico Studies: Volume > 23
Giambattista Vico First Part: On the Constancy of Philosophy
128. New Vico Studies: Volume > 23
Giambattista Vico Second Part: On the Constancy of Philology
129. New Vico Studies: Volume > 24
John D. Schaeffer Translator’s Preface
130. New Vico Studies: Volume > 24
David L. Marshall The Impersonal Character of Action in Vico’s De Coniuratione Principum Neapolitanorum
131. New Vico Studies: Volume > 24
Giambattista Vico Vico’s Reply to the False Book Notice: Vici Vindiciae
132. New Vico Studies: Volume > 24
Giambattista Vico Dissertations
133. New Vico Studies: Volume > 24
Donald Phillips Verene Vico’s Reply to the False Book Notice: The Vici Vindiciae
134. New Vico Studies: Volume > 25
Thora Ilin Bayer The Enlightenment and Counter-Enlightenment: Cassirer, Berlin, and Vico
135. New Vico Studies: Volume > 25
John D. Schaeffer Vico’s Counter-Enlightenment Theory of Natural Law
136. New Vico Studies: Volume > 25
Alexander U. Bertland Vico’s Sensus Communis, Natural Law, and the Counter-Enlightenment
137. New Vico Studies: Volume > 25
James K. Coleman Observations on Vico as Reader of Lucretius
138. New Vico Studies: Volume > 25
Molly Black Verene Vico: A Bibliography of Work in English 1994–2007
139. New Vico Studies: Volume > 25
Robin L. Thomas Vico’s “On the Death of Donn’Angela Cimmino, Marchesa of Petrella,” with an introduction by Andrea Battistini
140. New Vico Studies: Volume > 25
Sabrina Ferri Unfolded History: Vico’s Method of “Explication” as an Alternative to Enlightenment Rationalism