Sossio Giametta Explained

Sossio Arturo Giametta (20 November 1929 – 15 January 2024) was an Italian philosopher, translator and journalist.

Biography

After graduating in law, towards the end of the 1950s, Giametta met Giorgio Colli and Mazzino Montinari. He worked with them for four years, between Florence and Weimar, on a seminal critical edition of Friedrich Nietzsche's works, becoming one of the greatest contributors to the dissemination of Nietzsche's thought in Italy.[1]

He has translated all the works and most important posthumous writings of Nietzsche, of whom he is considered one of Italy's foremost experts.[2] Additionally, he has translated nearly all of Schopenhauer's works and crucial texts by Caesar, Spinoza, Goethe, Freud, and Max Stirner.

He also wrote several novels and short stories, marked by strong philosophical and moral value. This trait led Italian writer Raffaele La Capria to describe Giametta's prose as an astonishing encounter of literature and philosophy.[3] As a journalist and essayist, he collaborated with several Italian newspapers, including Corriere della Sera, La Repubblica, and Il Giornale.

Over the years, particularly since his 'Trilogy of Essentialism' (consisting of Bue squartato, L'oro prezioso dell'essere, and Cortocircuiti), Giametta developed his own philosophical system. He described it as follows: "Essentialism [...] is a new philosophy, based exclusively on nature, understood in its two aspects, both as naturans and as naturata. Essentialism describes the human condition as determined by the combination of two heterogeneous elements: the essence of all that exists, which is divine, and the conditions of existence, which are often all too diabolical. The balancing of these two elements, different in each individual, explains the eternal reasons why one believes or disbelieves, affirms or denies life, is optimistic or pessimistic."[4]

Sossio Giametta died on January 15, 2024, at the age of 94,[5] in Brussels, where he had moved in 1965 and worked for 30 years at the Council of Ministers of the European Union.[5]

Main Works

As a translator

As an author

Notes

  1. Web site: Morto il filosofo Sossio Giametta, uno studioso di Nietzsche che s'ispirava a Spinoza . 15 January 2024 .
  2. Web site: Sossio Giametta. Il moralista e il filosofo per Nietzsche .
  3. Web site: Morto Sossio Giametta, addio al filosofo dell'essenzialismo . 15 January 2024 .
  4. Interview with Simone Paliaga published in Libero on 25 October 2014.
  5. https://napoli.repubblica.it/cronaca/2024/01/15/news/cultura_morto_il_filosofo_sossio_giametta_il_cordoglio_di_sangiuliano-421879991/ Morto il filosofo Sossio Giametta, profondo e originale interprete di Nietzsche

Bibliography

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