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Academic literature on the topic 'Intransigentismo'
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Journal articles on the topic "Intransigentismo"
Logan, Oliver. "A Journal. La Civiltà Cattolica From Pius IX to Pius XII (1850-1958)." Studies in Church History 38 (2004): 375–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0424208400015941.
Full textDickie, John. "Antonio Bresciani and the sects: conspiracy myths in an intransigent Catholic response to the Risorgimento." Modern Italy 22, no. 1 (February 2017): 19–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/mit.2016.51.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Intransigentismo"
ZANONI, Elena. "Scienza, patria e religione. Antonio Stoppani e la cultura italiana dell'Ottocento." Doctoral thesis, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/11562/398337.
Full textAntonio Stoppani (1824-1891) was a preeminent figure not only in the Lombard-Venetian context where he was active for the first half of his life, but also in the national context to which he devoted himself in his latter years. Nevertheless, we do not have a complete profile of him and his work. Despite the renewed interest in Stoppani in recent years, it was still necessary to undertake an all-encompassing study of his cultural commitment to fully understand his wide-ranging character, that made him one of the most important cultural figures in various strategic fields of 19th Century culture. The aim of the thesis is to produce a ‘biography in context’ of Stoppani in order to provide an all-round reconstruction of his cultural commitment by identifying his most significant relationships with people, institutions and historical processes that marked the Italian 19th-Century history. In fact, the study of Stoppani’s life and work is relevant in the understanding of the history of the scientific community and scientific institutions, but, at the same time, it is interwined with pivotal events of the Italian 19th-Century history as a whole. Firstly, the Lombardian naturalist’s experience fits in fully with the Risorgimental process: when he was still in seminary he took part in the 1848 riots and partecipated, with the other students, at the ‘Cinque Giornate’ of Milan. After his ordination, Stoppani’s career began during pivotal years in the formation of the new national State and his first academic work began in 1861. Furthermore, his activity as a professor and scientist developed mainly between the two most important cities of the new national reality: Milan, at the time the moral and cultural capital of the peninsula, and Florence, the second capital of the Realm and seat of extremely important cultural initiatives. In both cities, Stoppani could interact with all the most important figures of the intellectual, political and scientific scene of the time. Throughout his intellectual and working career it is possible to identify an evolution and a gradual broadening of his interests. This provides a deeper knowledge of Stoppani’s life and cultural commitment, by exploring it through different thematic areas following the chronological order of the events. The first chapter aims to reconstruct the family background of Stoppani and his formative years, crucial years in the history of the national State. In fact, during this time the patriotic ideals that drove the Milanese and Lombardian clergy to take part in the 1848 revolutions and the Wars of Independence spread through the Lombardian seminaries. At the same time, the latter witnessed the diffusion of Antonio Rosmini’s thought, which greatly influenced Stoppani’s figure and laid the foundations for Milan and Lombardy to become the most important centres of Italian conciliatorism in the second half of the 19th Century. In relation to this first phase of his life the chapter intends to outline the lively cultural environment of Milan in the 19th Century and understand how and when Stoppani’s passion for natural sciences surfaced. Secondly, it will try to reconstruct his scientific and academic career, by exploring his ideas with regard to the organisation of university teaching. It investigates the networks and cultural environments in which he was active at the time; a time in which the national scientific community was first emerging and being consolidated. The chapter also takes into consideration his involvement in matters concerning the economic and material growth of the Country, above all his research into oil drilling and his role in establishing the geological map of the Realm. In this context it seemed appropriate to insert an analysis of his contribution to the diffusion of alpinism as an activity of multiple value: scientific, educative, spiritual. All of this was part of the idea of «science for the Nation» which made the scientist a hero in the service of the Country. The second chapter is dedicated to the analysis of the contribution offered by the Lombardian naturalist to geology and palaeontology with the aim of clarifying the theoretical and methodological basis of his thought and outlining its evolution in these disciplinary fields. Furthermore, it attempts to outline Stoppani’s contribution, albeit minor, without a doubt equally significant, to the rising Italian paletnology and his position in relation to the diffusion of evolutionistic ideas. Following this chapter some attention has been given to one of the main goals of Stoppani’s cultural commitment, that is the will to reconcile the needs of his faith and his Catholicism with those of a free, rigorous and up-dated naturalistic research in order to claim a place for a Christian science, something which was strongly called into question during the late decades. Finally, it aims to define Stoppani’s role within the Italian scientific community and the networks in which he was involved. The third chapter is dedicated to Stoppani’s commitment in the field of science popularisation. This commitment met at the same time a commercial and entrepreneurial vocation and those aspirations of “educating the people” that Stoppani shared with the intellectual élites of the peninsula. Therefore, it aims to comprehend the multiplicity of roles that Stoppani attributed to science. On one hand it was an essential instrument for the economic and material development of Man and the Country; on the other hand it was necessary for the intellectual and moral formation of the individual as a medium for knowing the world and, through it, God and the providential design underlying the equilibrium of the natural system. So, science had a social, national and spiritual role and, for these reasons, it had to be taught and popularised at all social levels. In relation to this it was a priority to focus attention on “The Beautiful Country”, a scientific-popularising best-seller that provided a decisive contribution to the process of unification, and also on “Water and Air”. This piece of work has been overlooked for a long time by scholars, but it represents one of the most incisive and original popularising contributions of the Lombardian naturalist and it offers the most complete and all-round view of his thought. Finally, the fourth chapter is dedicated to Stoppani’s commitment to the apologetic and exegetic field in order to understand how a priest, fully faithful to the Church, to its pontiff and its dogma, was able to reconcile his religious vocation with his scientific passion in an age dominated by attitudes of radical intransigence towards modernity by significant sectors of catholic clergy. It tries to clarify the basis of Stoppani’s conciliatorism; the theoretical presuppositions, essentially derived from Rosmini’s thought, that allowed him to harmonise the recent scientific results with Genesis’ pages and the catholic dogma and, more generally, further a rapprochement between the Church and the liberal State. It aims to reconstruct the events that brought him to the centre of the conflict between transigents and intransigents and, finally, highlight Stoppani’s legacy and its contribution to the modernist movement developed at the beginning of the 20th Century, which started from a new scientific and historical approach to the Sacred Texts and from a renewal of the intellectual and cultural apparatus of Catholicism.
Books on the topic "Intransigentismo"
Neotomismo e intransigentismo cattolico. Milano: IPL, 1986.
Find full textBrancati, Antonio. Laicità, massoneria e senso religioso nell'ultimo Mamiani (1861-1885): Un cattolico liberale nell'epoca degli intransigentismi postunitari. Ancona, Italia: Il lavoro editoriale, 2010.
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