Conclusion
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 September 2009
Summary
Vico disconcerts. Two hundred and fifty years after his death he continues to baffle his admirers as he did in his lifetime – and in his death. As can be read in his own Autobiography:
When the hour for Vico's funeral rites had been set, almost all the professors were eager to pay this last tribute to their deceased colleague and came to his house to accompany the remains. The Confraternity of Santa Sophia, of which Vico had been a member, were to carry the coffin as they regularly did for their deceased members. When the Confraternity arrived at his house, they began to murmur that they would not allow the professors of the University to bear the pall. The professors on the other hand contended they had the right to that honor, and adduced many precedents. Meanwhile the corpse was carried down into the courtyard of the house and laid on the bier, which bore the arms of the Royal University. Hereupon there began a great uproar between the members of the Confraternity and the professors of the University, neither side being willing to yield to the other, and both showing in the presence of the dead how far human weakness and pride can go. As no amicable understanding could be reached, the Confraternity, with small regard for human decency, decided to take their leave, abandoning the corpse where it lay.
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- Information
- The Rehabilitation of MythVico's 'New Science', pp. 266 - 272Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1992