Introduction to Philosophy by Giovanni Gentile, summary
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This book is a fundamental philosophical work by the eminent Italian thinker, composed of articles from the 1920s and 1930s. The text provides a detailed justification for the doctrine of "actual idealism," which reduces any possible reality to a pure, evolving act of human thought.
Historical context and the author’s path
The text opens with a biographical essay by A. L. Zorin. Giovanni Gentile developed his views in a heated debate with Marxism and positivism, collaborating for a long time with Benedetto Croce. The philosophers’ paths diverged due to differing understandings of Hegelian dialectics and political disagreements. Gentile supported Benito Mussolini, expecting fascism to bring spiritual renewal to the nation, while Croce went into opposition. The life of the founder of actualism was tragically cut short in Florence in 1944 at the hands of partisans.
Development of human self-awareness
The author begins her conceptual analysis with a critique of ancient naturalism. The ancient Greeks mistakenly viewed the world as an external entity, independent of the thinking subject. Socrates made a powerful breakthrough by turning his gaze inward to the spirit. However, Plato and Aristotle later returned to dualism, dividing reality into brute matter and eternal ideas. Renaissance humanism and Descartes, with his formula of the cogito, brought European civilization closer to a true understanding of freedom. Kant and Hegel accomplished a great deal, but retained traces of metaphysical dogmatism. Hegel’s dialectic describes pre-existing concepts, whereas true philosophy must capture the pulse of living thought.
Thought as a pure act
The central category of the constructed system is the act in action. The philosopher draws a strict line between "thinking thought" and "thoughts thought." All accomplished facts, written books, or historical eras are dead until the spirit pays attention to them here and now. Nothing exists until the subject becomes aware of it. The spirit continually creates its world. Outside of this active creation, the human self becomes a meaningless abstraction. Actualism rejects any limits on consciousness, insisting on the absolute freedom of the infinite thinking principle. Differences and contradictions arise only within this unitary act.
Nature and living experience
The Italian neo-idealist resolutely attacks positivism. Naive researchers believe the external environment is objective. Gentile proves the opposite: the material world is experienced exclusively through our body. The physical universe is tied to the organism. The body acts as a microcosm, reflecting the entire macrocosm. Experience is not constructed through the passive absorption of signals. It is a dynamic construction, the foundation of which is deep feeling. Only by being within experience and guiding it does the mind attain true reliability. Epistemological doubts disappear at the point of convergence between the knower and the known.
Aesthetics and Religion
Spiritual life is rhythmic. Art is understood as pure subjectivity, naive and spontaneous intuition. The poet creates an autonomous world of fantasy, where he is absolutely free and plays like a child. Art is alien to logical proof; it formulates an inner passion. Religion operates differently. In a mystical impulse, reason affirms the absolute object, completely denying its own significance and striving to dissolve in God. Philosophy synthesizes these opposing aspirations. It fuses aesthetic warmth with religious objectivity, giving birth to concrete logical knowledge.
The historical process and the ethical state
History is made by people, not by the blind laws of evolution. Drawing on the works of Giambattista Vico, the author points out that any historical era becomes contemporary when the researcher resurrects its conflicts in their consciousness. The past seems necessary only from the perspective of chronological completeness. In its present dimension, it is always imbued with freedom of choice. The individual overcomes natural isolation through social connections. The citizen realizes the universal will, specifying it in the form of the state. Gentile conceived of the ideal society as an ethical substance. Maximum personal freedom paradoxically merges with the maximum power of the nation.
Science and New Proof of God’s Existence
Specialized disciplines study isolated fragments of reality. The scientist records abstract facts, formulating particular patterns. Philosophical criticism is required to systematize fragmented data. Without constant self-reflection, science descends into intellectual blindness. In discussing higher substances, the thinker refutes the classic ontological arguments of Thomas Aquinas and Anselm of Aosta. It is impossible to deduce the Creator from dry logical schemas. God is comprehended as absolute Truth within the pulsating act of self-awareness. The divine and the human are intertwined in a creative fire that transcends material necessity.
Responses to doubting critics
In the final chapters, Gentile defends his doctrine against frequent attacks. Opponents accuse him of solipsism, blind naturalism, and latent atheism. He retorts vehemently. Actualism does not destroy the plurality of people or social institutions, but discovers their true unity in the transcendental subject. The philosophy of pure act retains a profound religiosity, as it demands continuous moral effort. Spiritual tranquility is illusory. Reason is condemned to the severe torments of self-development. Rejecting the transcendental dictator, the philosopher finds God within the human breast, where truth is created every moment.
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