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ANTONIO GENOVESI (1712-1769)

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Originally appearing in Volume V11, Page 600 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ANTONIO GENOVESI (1712-1769)  ,
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Italian writer on philosophy and
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political
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economy, was born at Castiglione, near Salerno, on the 1st of November 1712 . He was educated for the church, and, after some hesitation, took orders in 1736 at Salerno, GENSONNE where he was appointed professor of eloquence at the theological seminary . During this period of his
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life he began the study of philosophy, being especially attracted by Locke . Dissatisfied with ecclesiastical life, Genovesi resigned his
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post, and qualified as an advocate at Rome . Finding law as distasteful as
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theology, he devoted himself entirely to philosophy, of which he was appointed extraordinary professor in the university of Naples . His first
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works were Elementa Metaphysicae (1743 et seq.) and Logica (1745) . The former is divided into four parts, Ontosophy, Cosmosophy, Theosophy, Psychosophy, supplemented by a
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treatise on ethics and a dissertation on first causes . The Logic, an eminently
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practical
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work, written from the point of view of Locke, is in five parts, dealing with (1) the nature of the human mind, its faculties and operations; (2) ideas and their kinds; (3) the true and the false, and the various degrees of knowledge; (4) reasoning and argumentation; (5) method and the ordering of our thoughts . If Genovesi does not take a high rank in philosophy, he deserves the credit of having introduced the new order of ideas into Italy, at the same time preserving a just mean between the two extremes of sensualism and idealism . Although bitterly opposed by the partisans of scholastic routine, Genovesi found influential patrons, amongst them Bartolomeo Intieri, a Florentine, who in 1754 founded the first Italian or
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European chair of political economy (commerce and
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mechanics), on condition that Genovesi should be the first professor, and that it should never be held by an ecclesiastic . The fruit of Genovesi's professorial labours was the Lezioni di Commercio, the first
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complete and systematic work in Italian on
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economics . On the whole he belongs to the " Mercantile " school, though he does not regard
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money as the only form of
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wealth .

Specially noteworthy in the Lezioni are the sections on human wants as the

foundation of economical theory, on labour as the source of wealth, on
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personal services as economic factors, and on the
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united working of the
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great
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industrial functions . He advocated freedom of the corn trade, reduction of the number of religious communities, and deprecated regulation of the
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interest on loans . In the spirit of his age he denounced the relics of
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medieval institutions, such as entails and tenures in mortmain . Gioja's more important treatise owes much to Genovesi's lectures . Genovesi died on the 22nd of September 1769 . See C . Ugoni, Della letteratura italiana nella seconda
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meta del secolo X VIII (1820–1822) ; A . Fabroni, Vitae Italorum doctrina excellentium (1778–1799); R . Bobba, Commemorazione di A . Genovesi (
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Benevento, 1867) .

End of Article: ANTONIO GENOVESI (1712-1769)
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