Region: | Western philosophy |
Era: | 19th-century philosophy |
Augusto Conti | |
Birth Date: | 6 December 1822 |
Birth Place: | San Miniato, Italy |
Death Place: | Florence, Italy |
Augusto Conti (December 6, 1822 – March 6, 1905) was an Italian philosopher and academic.[1] [2]
Augusto Conti was born in San Pietro alle Fonti in San Miniato al Tedesco in 1822 to a family from Livorno.[1] [3] His parents were Natale and Anna Passetti.[4]
He studied in Siena and Pisa;[3] at university he assaulted a professor whom he considered reactionary.[1] He was expelled from the university and spent a few months in prison.[1] After that episode he was forced to complete his studies outside the Grand Duchy of Tuscany.[1] He therefore moved to the Duchy of Lucca and graduated in law at the University of Lucca.[3] He was a standard-bearer in Montanara with the Tuscan volunteers during the First Italian War of Independence.[1] [3] He taught in Lucca, Pisa and in the Higher Institute of Florence. Distinguished Christian philosopher, prestigious writer, pedagogist, he collaborated with Raffaello Lambruschini on the periodical La famiglia e la scuola.[1]
On March 31, 1869, for his literary and scientific merits, he was called to sit in the College of Residents of the Accademia della Crusca; later he covered the Archconsulate several times.[1] [3] He was the philosopher of beauty, who defined being between the true and the good, and connected them as the means between the beginning and the end.[1] He had a classical style and his works are sometimes appreciated more for the elegance of the prose than for the content.[1]
In Florence, he was for a long time high councilor of public education and collaborated with the architect Emilio De Fabris for the decoration of the facade of Santa Maria del Fiore using iconographic symbolism to represent the greatness of Christianity and the meaning of the Virgin Mary.[1] [5]