Ernesto Grassi

Ernesto Grassi

Prof. Grassi at the lectern in Berlin
Born (1902-05-02)May 2, 1902
Milan, Italy
Died December 22, 1991(1991-12-22) (aged 89)
Munich, Bavaria, Germany
Nationality Italian
Occupation Philosopher

Ernesto Grassi (May 2, 1902 – December 22, 1991) was an Italian philosopher.

Life

He maintained an intimate friendship with Donald Phillip Verene.[1]

Thought

Grassi sought to take up the Heideggerean Destruktion of metaphysics, grounding his philosophical enterprise instead in the tradition of rhetoric.[2] He identified the Italian humanist tradition as a potential site to begin this development of philosophy, and his works often contain copious references to the Italian humanists. In this tradition, "work and metaphor are the source of human history and society", an approach to thought which must reject the rational, proceeding as it does from "general and necessary premises."[3]

His work Rhetoric as Philosophy is considered as "the first protracted attempt to synthesize Italian humanism with rhetoric, as a source of philosophical invention."[4]

References

  1. Timothy Crusius. "New Preface" in Rhetoric as Philosophy: The Humanist Tradition. Trans. John Michael Krois and Azizeh Azodi. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 2001.
  2. Ernesto Grassi and John Michael Krois. "Italian Humanism and Heidegger's Thesis of the End of Philosophy." Philosophy & Rhetoric, Vol. 13, No. 2 (Spring, 1980), pp. 79-98.
  3. Ernesto Grassi and John Michael Krois. "Can Rhetoric Provide a New Basis for Philosophizing? The Humanist Tradition." Philosophy & Rhetoric Vol. 11, No. 2, Spring 1978.
  4. Thomas B. Farell. Rhetoric Review, Vol. 21, No. 1, (2002), p. 101.

External links

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