356 Pages
by
Routledge
356 Pages
by
Routledge
317 Pages
by
Routledge
Also available as eBook on:
With a new introduction by Alan Sica.
Giambattista Vico (1668-1744) is often regarded as the beleaguered, neglected genius of pre-Enlightenment Naples. His work-though known to Herder, Coleridge, Matthew Arnold, and Michelet-widely and deeply appreciated only during the twentieth century. Although Vico may be best known for the use James Joyce made of his theories in Finnegans Wake , Croce's... Read more
I: Vigors Theory of Knowledge : First Phase; II: Vigors Theory of Knowledge : Second Phase; III: Internal Structure of the New Science; IV: The Imaginative Form of Knowledge (Poetry and Language); V: The Semi-Imaginative Form of Knowledge (Myth and Religion); VI: The Moral Consciousness; VII: Morality and Religion; VIII: Morality and Law; IX: The Historical Aspect of Law; X: Providence; XI: The Law of Reflux; XII: Metaphysics; XIII: Transition to History : General Character of Vico’s Treatment of History; XIV: New Principles for the History of Obscure and Legendary Periods; XV: Heroic Society; XVI: Homer and Primitive Poetry; XVII: The History of Rome and the Rise of Democracy; XVIII: The Return of Barbarism : The Middle Ages; XIX: Vico and the Tendencies of Contemporary Culture; XX: Conclusion I Vico and the Later Developments of Philosophical and Historical Thought
Biography
Peter F. Drucker






