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facts about carlo michelstaedter.html

19 Facts About Carlo Michelstaedter

facts about carlo michelstaedter.html1.

Carlo Michelstaedter was born in Gorizia, the capital of the Austro-Hungarian County of Gorizia and Gradisca, the youngest of four children of Albert and Emma Michelstaedter.

2.

Carlo Michelstaedter's father was the director of the local branch of the Trieste-based Assicurazioni Generali insurance company.

3.

Carlo Michelstaedter's sister Paula remembered him as a child fearful of the dark and heights, stubborn and not at all prepared to apologize for any misbehavior.

4.

Carlo Michelstaedter's father was the chairman of the Gabinetto di Lettura Goriziano, a local cultural association for the fostering of literary culture, and he pushed his son towards literary study.

5.

Carlo Michelstaedter's aunt was Carolina Luzzatto, who was a supporter of Italian irredentism.

6.

Carlo Michelstaedter was considered an introverted boy, but by the end of high school, he developed into a brilliant, athletic, intelligent youth.

7.

Carlo Michelstaedter enrolled in the department of mathematics at the University of Vienna, but soon moved to Florence, a city he savored for its arts and language.

8.

Carlo Michelstaedter majored in Greek and Latin, and selected for his laurea thesis a philosophical study of persuasion and rhetoric in ancient philosophy.

9.

Carlo Michelstaedter was very tired, and that day he had a fight with his mother, who complained he had not wished her a happy birthday.

10.

Carlo Michelstaedter is buried in the Jewish cemetery in Rozna Dolina near Nova Gorica, Slovenia.

11.

For Carlo Michelstaedter, common life is an absence of life, narrow and deluded as it is by the god of pleasure, which deceives man, promising pleasures and results that are not real, although man thinks they are.

12.

Resignation and adapting oneself to the world, for Carlo Michelstaedter, is the true death.

13.

Carlo Michelstaedter's thought has been recognized as a precursor of Heidegger in philosophy, of Wittgenstein in the critique of language, of Derrida in hermeneutics.

14.

From late 1907 through 1908, Carlo Michelstaedter made a key contribution in Europe to the study of the tragic as a possible means of salvaging an immanent meaning, a resistant centre to the "crisis of the foundations" that had transformed existence.

15.

In 1908 Carlo Michelstaedter added his voice to those of Henrik Ibsen, Otto Weininger, Scipio Slataper, and Giovanni Amendola in Italy, who would turn to "tragic thought" as a response to the abyss opened by nihilism.

16.

Carlo Michelstaedter's analysis sought to provide the possibility of resisting the abstracting force that social consensus exercised on both philosophical and quotidian forms of thought.

17.

Carlo Michelstaedter's will extends beyond the will of the subject to include the subject's state of need.

18.

When this mechanism is extended from the individual to the whole of society, the result is what Carlo Michelstaedter describes as "correlativity", that is, a system of contrasting wills that leads individuals to see everything contained in the real in relation to their own needs, and thus as objects to be annexed for their "usefulness".

19.

However, the work should be regarded equally as important; in the poem "I Figli del Mare", Carlo Michelstaedter profoundly writes about persuasion and rhetoric in a poetic way.