Fernando Savater
This biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification. (August 2018) |
Fernando Savater | |
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Born | Fernando Fernández-Savater Martín 21 June 1947 |
Alma mater | Universidad Complutense de Madrid |
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Influences | |
Website | www |
Fernando Fernández-Savater Martín (born 21 June 1947 at Basque city of San Sebastián) is a Spanish philosopher, essayist and author.
Early years and career[]
Born in San Sebastián, he was an Ethics professor at the University of the Basque Country for over a decade. Presently he is a Philosophy professor at the Complutense University of Madrid. He has won several accolades for his literary work, which covers issues as diverse as contemporary ethics, politics, cinema and literary studies. In 1990, Savater and columnist and publisher, Javier Pradera, founded the magazine, Claves de Razón Práctica.[1]
In November 2012 he was awarded the prestigious Octavio Paz Prize of Poetry and Essay.[2]
In that same year 2012, with issue number 222 (May-June 2012), he became Editor in Chief of "Claves de razón práctica" (Spanish for "Keys for Practical Reason"), a critical thought and cultural crusading review founded by Javier Pradera in 1990, thus giving start to a second era of this prestigious publication, with an editorial board composed of Basilio Baltasar, Francisco Calvo Serraller, Joaquín Estefanía, Carlos García Gual, Santos Juliá and José María Ridao.[3]
Political activism[]
Savater founded a political party currently disbanded called Unión, progreso y democracia (Spanish for Union, Progress and Democracy and often shortened as UPyD) with former socialists MP Rosa Díez, Albert Boadella and Mario Vargas Llosa in order to oppose different nationalist movements in Spanish mainstream politics.[4][5] Critics have pointed out that their political outlook seems to be dominated by a strong Spanish nationalist ideology itself[citation needed].
Savater was one of the intellectuals and politicians who endorsed the 2012 manifesto of the "reconversion.es" platform vouching for a recentralization of the country, and considered a precursor of the far-right Vox.[6] In 2018, Savater adhered to the manifesto Manifiesto por la historia y la libertad promoted by Francisco Franco National Foundation, decrying the Law of Historical Memory.[7]
He has taken an active part in several organizations engaged with peace in the Basque Country and against terrorism and Basque nationalism, such as Movimiento por la Paz y la No Violencia, Gesto por la Paz, Foro Ermua, and currently ¡Basta Ya!
Personal life[]
Savater is also known as a philosophy popularizer, TV host, lecturer and for his political activism.
He defines himself as an atheist,[8] an anglophile and a defender of the Enlightenment in the Voltaire tradition.[9]
Bibliography[]
- Nihilismo y acción (Nihilism and Action) (1970)
- Ensayo sobre Cioran (Essay on Cioran) (1974)
- Panfleto contra el Todo (A Proclamation against Everything) (1978)
- Criaturas del aire (1979);
- Caronte aguarda (Charon Awaits) (1981)
- La tarea del héroe (The Task of the Hero) (1981)
- Invitación a la ética (An Invitation to Ethics) (1982)
- La infancia recuperada (Childhood Recovered) (1983)
- Sobre vivir (On Living -and Surviving) (1983)
- Las razones del antimilitarismo y otras razones (The Reasons for Antimilitarism and Other Reasons) (1984)
- El contenido de la felicidad (The Contents of Happiness) (1986)
- Ética como amor propio (Ethics as Self-Esteem) (1988)
- Ética para Amador (Ethics for Amador) (1991)
- Política para Amador (Politics for Amador) (1992)
- Sin contemplaciones (Straight Talk) (1993)
- Despierta y lee (Wake Up and Read) (1998)
- Las preguntas de la vida (The Questions of Life) (1999)
- Perdonen las molestias (Sorry for Disturbing) (2001)
- El Gran Laberinto (The Great Labyrinth) (2005)
- Ética de Urgencia (Importunate Ethics) (2012)
References[]
- ^ Rojo, José Andrés (21 November 2011). "The watchman of Spain's transition signs off". El País (in Spanish). Madrid. Retrieved 23 November 2011.
- ^ Constenla, Tereixa (16 November 2012). "Fernando Savater, premio de Poesía y Ensayo Octavio Paz". El País (in Spanish). Madrid: Prisa. Retrieved 17 November 2012.
- ^ ARCE (Asociación de Revistas Culturales de España) http://www.revistasculturales.com/revistas/15/claves-de-razon-practica/
- ^ Ramírez, Daniel (19 September 2016). "Fernando Savater: "Soy de UPyD, pero Ciudadanos es la mejor opción de las que se presentan"". El Español (in Spanish). Retrieved 13 August 2018.
- ^ Mateo, Juan José (15 June 2016). "UPyD se pone las gafas de Savater". El País (in Spanish). Madrid: Prisa. Retrieved 13 August 2018.
- ^ Casals, Xavier (1 April 2019). "Catalunya i 'la España viva' de Vox". Política & Prosa.
- ^ Borra, Carlos C. (1 September 2018). "San Gil, Mayor Oreja y Gallardón apoyan un manifiesto de la Fundación Franco". Noticias de Gipuzkoa. Archived from the original on 2019-09-25.
- ^ Bosch i Fridrin, Miquel Àngel (November 2012). "Escepticismo, agnosticismo y ateísmo Concepto de Dios, panteísmo, deismo" (PDF). Mabosch (in Spanish). Retrieved 13 August 2018.
- ^ Oneca Agurruza, Iñaki (11 October 2004). "Voltaire o el caos de las ideas claras" (PDF). Aposta. Revista de Ciencias Sociales (in Spanish). ISSN 1696-7348. Retrieved 13 August 2018.
External links[]
- Official website
- "Web in honor to Fernando Savater". Archived from the original on 17 March 2016. Retrieved 5 April 2007.
- "English translation Ética de Urgencia".
- 1947 births
- Living people
- People from San Sebastián
- 20th-century Spanish philosophers
- 21st-century Spanish philosophers
- Spanish agnostics
- Academics of the Complutense University of Madrid
- Recipients of the Order of Constitutional Merit
- University of the Basque Country faculty
- Spanish social liberals
- Spanish schoolteachers
- Philosophy writers
- Spanish ethicists
- Male essayists
- Philosophers of education