Grice
e Bonvecchio: la ragione conversazionale el’implicatura conversazionale di Dumezil
e Marte – la scoperta di 1992 dei delinquenti – al Quirinale -- guerriero – la
triada Giove Marte Giano -- marziale – scuola di Pavia – filosofia lombarda -- filosofia
italiana – Luigi Speranza, pel Gruppo di Gioco di H. P. Grice, The
Swimming-Pool Library (Pavia). Filosofo lombardo. Filosofo italiano. Pavia, Lombardia. Grice: “Bonvecchio
is a good one; of course, he has philosophised on what Italian philosophers
have philosophised most: ‘e amore’ – only he calls it eros --.” “This is strange: this Italian fascination
with the Hellenism: one BAD thing about the Hellenic or Grecian lingo is that
they have FOUR words for ‘love’: philos, eros, agape, charitas – Cicero
followed William of Ockham’s razor, ‘do nott multiply words’ – and translated
them all by ‘amore’ – Now, with Bonvecchio, it’s not just, as with Tonny
Bennett, just ‘amore,’ – iit’s amore ‘come simbolo’, that is, as used in
communication – as per Socrates with Alcebiades – the daemon, Amore, is the
metaxu – so there is a communication of Apollo and Dioniso via love – all VERY
philosophical, and actually very Oxonian – vide Walter Pater!” Laureatosi in Filosofia Teoretica presso l'Pavia inizia la
sua carriera accademica come borsista, contrattista e ricercatore presso la
Facoltà di Lettere e Filosofia della stessa Università. Insegna "Filosofia
della Politica" nella Facoltà di Lettere e Filosofia dell'Università degli
Studi di Palermo. Nello stesso ambito dottrinale insegna nel 1990
nell'Università degli Studi di Trieste sino al 2001. Da questo stesso anno è Professore
di Filosofia delle Scienze Sociali nel Corso di Laurea di Scienze della Comunicazione
della Facoltà di Scienze MM. FF. NN. dell'Università degli Studi dell'Insubria
dove dal 2003 diviene vicedirettore del Dipartimento di Informatica e
Comunicazione. Claudio Bonvecchio è
stato iniziato alla Massoneria presso la loggia del Grande Oriente d'Italia
Cardano di Pavia, dove ha ricoperto varie cariche. Grande Oratore del Grande
Oriente d'Italia in seno alla Giunta guidata dal Gran Maestro Stefano Bisi,
nel è stato eletto Gran Maestro aggiunto. Dal 5 dicembre è componente del Cda della Fondazione Luigi
Einaudi Onlus. Altre opere: Particolarmente
dedito agli studi sulla simbologia e sulla mitologia politica. “Immagine del
politico. Saggi su simbolo e mito politico” (Milani, Padova); “Imago imperii
imago mundi” (Milani, Padova); “L'ombra del potere. Il lato oscuro della
società: elogio del politicamente scorretto” (Red, Como); “La lanza di Marte; o
il simbolico nella guerra” (Milani, Padova). “La spada e la corona: studi di
simbolica politica” (Barbarossa, Milano); Gli’arconti di questo mondo. Gnosi:
politica e diritto” (Edizioni Trieste, Trieste); “Il pensiero forte, Settimo
Sigillo, Roma); “Apologia dei doveri dell'uomo” (Terziaria, Milano); “La maschera
e l'uomo” (Franco Angeli, Milano); “Il coraggio di essere” (Dadò, Lugano); “Europa
degli Eroi Europa dei mercanti. Itinerari di ribellione” (Settimo Sigillo,
Roma); “Inquietudine e verità” (Giappichelli, Torino); “Dove va l'idea di
Tradizione” (Settimo Sigillo, Roma); “Il sacro e la cavalleria” (Mimesis
Edizioni, Milano); “Esoterismo e Massoneria, Mimesis Edizioni, Milano); “I
Viaggi dei Filosofi” (Mimesis Edizioni, Milano); “La Filosofia del Signore
degli Anelli” (Mimesis Edizioni, Milano); “Ripensare l'identità. Per una geopolitica
dell'anima europea” (Settimo Sigillo, Roma); “Il Cavaliere, la Morte e il
Diavolo. Un percorso nella post-modernità” (ScriptaWeb, Napoli); “La Magia e il
Sacro: saggi Inattuali” (Mimesis Edizioni); “Eros come simbolo” (Amore,
Cupido). AlboVersorio, Milano); L'orologio dell'Apocalisse. La fine del mondo e
la filosofia” (AlboVersorio, Milano,. Scritti in onore Simboli, politica e
potere. Scritti in onore di Claudio Bonvecchio, Paolo Bellini, Fabrizio Sciacca
ed Erasmo S. Storace, AlboVersorio, Milano. Università
dell'Insubria[collegamento interrotto]
Grande Oriente d'Italia Convegno
a Matera: Europa, Libera muratoria, cultura
Claudio Bonvecchio scheda nel sito dell'Università degli Studi
dell'Insubria. Filosofia Filosofo del XX
secoloFilosofi italiani Professore1947 20 gennaio PaviaMassoni. The Archaic Triad is a hypothetical divine triad, consisting of
the three allegedly original deities worshipped on the Capitoline Hill in Rome:
Jupiter, Mars and Quirinus.[1] This structure was no longer clearly detectable
in later times, and only traces of it have been identified from various
literary sources and other testimonies. Many scholars dispute the validity of
this identification. Description Edit Georg Wissowa, in his manual of the
Roman religion, identified the structure as a triad on the grounds of the
existence in Rome of the three flamines maiores, who carry out service to these
three gods. He remarked that this triadic structure looks to be predominant in
many sacred formulae which go back to the most ancient period and noted its
pivotal role in determining the ordo sacerdotum, the hierarchy of dignity of
Roman priests: Rex Sacrorum, Flamen Dialis, Flamen Martialis, Flamen Quirinalis
and Pontifex Maximus in order of decreasing dignity and importance. He remarks that
since such an order no longer reflected the real influence and relationships of
power among priests in the later times, it should have reflected a hierarchy of
the earliest phase of Roman religion. Wissowa identified the presence of such a
triad also in the Umbrian ritual of Iguvium where only Iove, Marte and Vofionus
are granted the epithet of Grabovius and the fact that in Rome the three
flamines maiores are all involved in a peculiar way in the cult of goddess
Fides. However Wissowa did not pursue further the analysis of the meaning and
function of the structure (which he called Göttersystem) he had
identified. Dumézil's analysis Edit Georges Dumézil in various works,
particularly in his Archaic Roman Religion advanced the hypothesis that this
triadic structure was a relic of a common Proto-Indo-European religion, based
on a trifunctional ideology modelled on the division of that archaic society.
The highest deity would thus be a heavenly sovereign endowed with religious,
magic and legal powers and prerogatives (connected and related to the king and
to priestly sacral lore in human society), followed in order of dignity by the
deity representing braveness and military prowess (connected and related to a
class of warriors) and lastly a deity representing the common human worldly
values of wealth, fertility, and pleasure (connected and related to a class of
economic producers). According to the hypothesis, such a tripartite structure
must have been common to all Indoeuropean peoples on accounts of its widespread
traces in religion and myths from India to Scandinavia, and from Rome to
Ireland. However it had disappeared from most societies since prehistoric
times, with the notable exception of India. In Vedic religion the
sovereign function was incarnated by Dyaus Pita and later appeared split into
its two aspects of uncanny and awe inspiring almighty power incarnated by
Varuna and of source and guardian of justice and compacts incarnated by Mitra.
Indraincarnated the military function and the twins Ashvins(or Nasatya) the
function of production, wealth, fertility and pleasure. In human society the
raja and the class of the brahmin priests represented the first function (and
enjoyed the highest dignity), the warrior class of the kshatriya represented
the second function and the artisan and merchant class of the vaishya the
third. Similarly in Rome Jupiter was the supreme ruler of the heavens and
god of thunder, represented on earth by the rex, king (later the rex sacrorum)
and his substitute, the Flamen Dialis, the legal aspect of sovereignty being
incarnated also by Dius Fidius, Mars was the god of military prowess and a war
deity, represented by his flamen Martialis; and Quirinus the enigmatic god of
the Roman populus ("people") organised in the curiae as a civilian
and productive force, represented by the Flamen Quirinalis. Apart than
from the analysis of the texts already collected by Wissowa, Dumezil stressed
the importance of the tripartite plan of the regia, the cultic centre of Rome
and official residence of the rex. As recorded by sources and confirmed by
archeological data it was devised to lodge the three major deities Iupiter,
Mars, and Ops, the deity of agricultural plenty, in three separate rooms.
The cult of Fides involved the three Flamines Maiores: they were carried to the
sacellum of the deity together in a covered carriage and officiated with their
right hand wrapped up to the fingers in a piece of white cloth. The association
with the deity that founded divine order (Fides is associated with Iupiter in
his function of guardian of the supreme juridical order) underlines the mutual
interconnections among them and of the gods they represented with the supreme
heavenly order, whose arcane character was represented symbolically in the
hidden character of the forms of the cult. The spolia opima were
dedicated by the person who had killed the king or chief of the enemy in
battle. They were dedicated to Jupiter in case the Roman was a king or his
equivalent (consul, dictator or tribunus militum consulari potestate), to Mars
in case he was an officer and to Quirinus in case he was common soldier.[6] The
sacrificial animals too were in each case the ones of the respective deity, i.
e. an ox to Jupiter, solitaurilia to Mars and a male lamb to Quirinus.
Besides Dumézil analysed the cultural functions of the Flamen Quirinalis to
better understand the characters of this deity. One important element was his
officiating on the feriae of the Consualia aestiva ( of the Summer), which
associated Quirinus to the cult of Consus and indirectly of Ops (Ops Consivia).
Other feriae on which this flamen officiated were the Robigalia, the Quirinalia
that Dumezil identifies with the last day of the Fornacalia, also named
stultorum feriae because on that day the people who had forgot to roast their
spelt on the day prescribed by the curio maximus for their own curia were given
a last chance to make amends, and the Larentalia held in memory of Larunda.
These religious duties show Quirinus was a civil god related to the
agricultural cycle and somehow to the worship of Roman ancestry. In
Dumézil's view the figure of Quirinus became blurred and started to be
connected to the military sphere because of the early assimilation to him of
the divinised Romulus, the warring founder and first king of Rome. A coincident
facilitating factor of this interpretation was the circumstance that Romulus
carried with himself the quality of twin and Quirinus had a correspondence in
the theology of the divine twins such the Indian Ashvins and the Scandinavian
Vani. The resulting interpretation was the mixed civil and military, warring
and peaceful personality of the god. A detailed discussion of the sources
is devoted by Dumézil to showing that they do not support the theory of an
agrarian Mars. Mars would be invoked both in the Carmen Arvale and in Cato's
prayer as the guardian, the armed protector of the fields and the harvest. He
is definitely not a deity of agricultural plenty and fertility. It is
also noteworthy that according to tradition Romulus established the double role
and duties, civil and military, of the Roman citizen. In this way the
relationship between Mars and Quirinus became a dialectic one, since Romans
would regularly pass from the warring condition to the civil one and vice
versa. In the yearly cycle this passage is marked by the rites of the Salii,
they themselves divided into two groups, one devoted to the cult of Mars (Salii
Palatini, created by Numa) and the other of Quirinus (Salii Collini, created by
Tullus Hostilius). The archaic triad in Dumézil's view was not strictly
speaking a triad, it was rather a structure underlying the earliest religious
thought of the Romans, a reflection of the common Indoeuropean heritage. This
grouping has been interpreted as a symbolic representation of early Roman
society, wherein Jupiter, standing in for the ritual and augural authority of
the Flamen Dialis (high priest of Jupiter) and the chief priestly colleges,
represents the priestly class, Mars, with his warrior and agricultural
functions, represents the power of the king and young nobles to bring
prosperity and victory through sympathetic magic with rituals like the October
Horse and the Lupercalia, and Quirinus, with his source as the deified form of
Rome's founder Romulus and his derivation from co-viri ("men
together") representing the combined military and economic strength of the
Roman people. According to his trifunctional hypothesis, this division
symbolizes the overarching societal classes of "priest" (Jupiter),
"warrior" (Mars) and "farmer" or "civilian"
(Quirinus). Though both Mars and Quirinus each had militaristic and
agricultural aspects, leading later scholars to frequently equate the two
despite their clear distinction in ancient Roman writings, Dumézil argued that
Mars represented the Roman gentry in their service as soldiers, while Quirinus
represented them in their civilian activities. Although such a distinction is
implied in a few Roman passages, such as when Julius Caesar scornfully calls
his soldiers quirites ("citizens") rather than milites
("soldiers"), the word quirites had by this time been dissociated
with the god Quirinus, and it is likely that Quirinus initially had an even
more militaristic aspect than Mars,[citation needed] but that over time Mars,
partially through synthesis with the Greek god Ares, became more warlike, while
Quirinus became more domestic in connotation. Resolving these inconsistencies and
complications is difficult chiefly because of the ambiguous and obscure nature
of Quirinus' cult and worship; while Mars and Jupiter remained the most popular
of all Roman gods, Quirinus was a more archaic and opaque deity, diminishing in
importance over time. References Edit ^ Ryberg, Inez Scott "Was the
Capitoline Triad Etruscan or Italic?". The American Journal of Philology.
Festus s.v. ordo sacerdotum p. 299 L 2nd. ^ Wissowa cited the following sources
as supporting the existence of this triad: Servius ad Aeneidem VIII 663 on the
ritual of the Salii, priests who use the ancilia in their ceremonies and are
under the tutelage of Jupiter, Mars and Quirinus; Polybius Hist. III 25, 6 in
occasion of a treaty stipulated by the fetials between Rome and Carthage; Livy
VIII 9, 6 in the formula of the devotio of Decius Mus; Festus s.v. spolia
opima, along with Plutarch Marcellus 8, Servius ad Aeneidem on the same topic. Wissowa Religion und Kultus der Roemer Munich. Dumézil,
La religion romaine archaique, Paris. Festus s.v.
spolia opima; L 2nd who has Ianus Quirinus, which let it possible an
identification of Quirinus as an epithet of Ianus. ^ G. Dumézil La religion romaine archaique Paris; It. tr. Milano. Quirinus Roman deity Flamen
Priest in ancient Rome Flamen Quirinalis High priest of Quirinus in
ancient Rome Wikipedia Content is available under CC BY-SA 3.0 unless
otherwise noted. Palazzo del Quirinale ospiterà nelle
sale della Palazzina Gregoriana la mostra L’arte di salvare l’arte. Frammenti
di storia d’Italia, curata dal Prof. Francesco Buranelli. L’esposizione è
realizzata in occasione dell’anniversario dell’istituzione del Comando
Carabinieri Tutela Patrimonio Culturale, un reparto specializzato dell’Arma dei
Carabinieri istituito per contrastare i crimini a danno al nostro patrimonio
storico artistico. E’ davvero un onore ed un emozione per noi guidoniani
partecipare alla mostra “L’Arte di Salvare l’arte”. Con un pizzico d’orgoglio
siamo lieti di annunciare che è stata esposta la nostra “Triade Capitolina”,
fiore all’occhiello del Museo di Montecelio, presente anche sull’homepage del
sito del Quirinale all’interno della sezione in cui viene presentata la
mostra. Ringraziamo il Generale dei Carabinieri Fabrizio Parrulli,
Comando Carabinieri di Tutela del Patrimonio Culturale, per l’invito a questo
prestigioso evento. Una presenza davvero gradita nell’inaugurazione è stata
quella della signora Ena, vedova del Generale Roberto Conforti il quale, con la
sua instancabile opera all’interno dell’Arma dei Carabinieri, riuscì a
recuperare la Triade Capitolina sottraendola alla criminalità. La
presenza della Triade al Quirinale rappresenta un volano importantissimo per la
crescita culturale e turistica della nostra Guidonia su cui tutta
l’Amministrazione punta tantissimo. Per tutte le informazioni sulla
mostra è possibile visitare il sito: http://palazzo. quirinale.it/…/_art…/arte-salva_home. Claudio Bonvecchio.
Keywords: marziale, simbolo della repubblica romana, simbolo dell’impero, imago
impero, imago mundi, Romolo, primo re, la corona del re. La spada, il
guerriero. Guerra, longobardo, guerra ostrogoto, bellum romanum, bellum civile,
etimologia di ‘mascara’, il concetto di eroe, Europa degl’eroi, italia
degl’eroi, gl’eroi, Bruno, furore eroico, Vico, eta eroica, equites,
cavalleria, massima stirpe guerriera romana, Mars, Marte, marziale, Marte,
padre di Romolo, Marte, emblema della guerra, marziale, campo marzio, Marte,
l’archeologia di Boni, mistica fascista, imago imperi, guerriero, Romolo re
corona, emblem della republica, eta degl’eroi, fascism, fascist imagery. Refs.:
Luigi Speranza, “Grice e Bonvecchio” – The Swimming-Pool Library. Bonvecchio.
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