Diego Donna is an Associate Professor in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Bologna, where he focuses on the history of modern and contemporary philosophy. His research ranges from early modern philosophy – especially the thought of Descartes and Spinoza – to contemporary philosophy and epistemology, on which he has published numerous articles in international journals. He has been a Visiting Scholar at several international research centres, including IRPhiL (Université Lyon III), Birkbeck College (London), Princeton University and Utrecht University. He is the author of I diagrammi della filosofia. Una storia eretica della filosofia contemporanea in Francia (Mucchi, 2024); Contre Spinoza. Critique, système et métamorphoses au siècle des Lumières (Georg, 2021); Hermeneutics and Conflict. Spinoza and the Downfall of Exegetical Interpretation (Brill, 2021); Dispersione, ordine, distanza. L’Illuminismo di Foucault, Luhmann, Blumenberg (Quodlibet, 2020); con P. Schiavo [eds], Ragione e mito. Hans Blumenberg e la costituzione della razionalità moderna (Mucchi, 2018). Brent Waterhouse received his PhD in Musicology from University of Bologna/Paris IV Sorbonne. He is the translator of Luca Bragalini, From La Scala to Harlem. Duke Ellington’s Symphonic Dreams, Oxford: Oxford University Press (forthcoming), Monica Massari and Vittorio Martone (ed.), Mafia Violence. Political, Symbolic and Economic Forms of Violence in Camorra Clans, NY: Routledge, 2019, Monia Cappuccini, Austerity and Democracy in Athens. Crisis and Community in Exarchia, London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2018. He is the author of Références à la musique et au sonore dans l’œuvre de Deleuze, in Pascale Criton, Jean-Marc Chouvel (ed.) Gilles Deleuze. La Pensée-musique, Centre de documentation de la musique contemporaine: Paris 2015 and Tracce di una cultura musicale ne Le Grand Voyage du Pays des Hurons di Gabriel Théodat Sagard, in Paola Dessi (ed.), Per una storia dei popoli senza note: atti dell'Atelier del Dottorato di ricerca in musicologia e beni musicali (F. A. Gallo): Ravenna, 15-17 October 2007, Bologna: Clueb, 2010.
Spinoza and the new idea of system in the French Enlightenment. The birth of critical history of philosophy. Is Spinoza a systematic atheist? A model for the libertine movements from eclectism to scientific philosophy. From Bayle to Condillac, Donna explores the many-sided figure of the ""french"" Spinoza. An illuminating book in history of philosophy. -- Michel Malherbe, Université de Nantes By analyzing the avatars of the notion of ""system,"" from Pierre Bayle to the Encyclopedists, Diego Donna renews the history of the reception of Spinozism. He thus sheds new light on the heterodox constitution of European modernity. -- Pierre-François Moreau, École Normale Supérieure de Lyon (ENSL) This history of Spinoza's reception in France in the 18th century uses the category of system as a guiding thread. Donna vigorously takes part in the current discussion on the multiple Enlightenments. He also offers a subtle reflection on the fate of philosophy and on today's profession of historian of philosophy. -- Sophie Roux, École Normale Supérieure, Paris …instead of simply looking for followers or adversaries, Donna examines Spinozism as a challenge and as a ferment in 18th c. philosophy. Absolutely innovative and a healthy antidote against the numerous simplifications on Spinozism and the Enlightenment. -- Theo Verbeek, Utrecht University “Who is Spinoza?” This is the question that Diego Donna asks at the beginning of this lively book. He then shows us the many philosophers Spinoza became as his thought traveled through the Enlightenment, and into our day, colliding with the birth of systematic philosophy, the invention of the history of philosophy, with the rise of encyclopedism and many other intellectual transformations, finally emerging in the cafés of 20th Century Paris. -- Daniel Garber, Princeton University