Faculty and Professors
All the academics making up the Scientific Committee give lectures at the Scuola as well as invited external scholars. Among others, the Scuola has hosted, mostly on a regular basis, Giuseppe Alberigo, Etienne Balibar, Remo Bodei, Lucio Gambi, Jacques Le Goff, Jacques Revel, Ruggiero Romano, Nicola Tranfaglia, Valerio Castronovo, Umberto Eco, Andrea Giardina, Eric Hobsbawm, Michael Crawford, Michel Korinman, Charles S. Maier, Giacomo Marramao, Nicola Matteucci, Anthony Molho, Wolfgang Mommsen, Romano Prodi, Adriano Prosperi, Ezio Raimondi, Paolo Rossi, Silvia Ronchey, Corrado Vivanti, Brigitte Mondrain, Pier Paolo Portinaro, Nicola Labanca, Pierre Lévêque, Évelyne Patlagean, Chiara Frugoni, Eva Cantarella, Carlo Ginzburg, Ivano Dionigi, Carlo Ossola, Salvo Mastellone, Aldo Agosti, Marco Revelli, Pietro Scoppola, Alberto Burgio, Enzo Collotti, Armando Petrucci, Domenico Losurdo, Ramón Teja Casuso, Santiago Montero Herrero, Paolo Luigi Branca, André Vauchez, Tullio Gregory, Angelo Panebianco, Giovanna Daverio Rocchi, Giovanni Levi, Franco Farinelli, Giuliana Gemelli, Furio Diaz, Giuseppe Nenci, Alain Boureau, Michel Sot, Raimondo Luraghi and Robert Nation.
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Famous quotes containing the words faculty and/or professors:
“Where is he who seeing a thousand men useless and unhappy, and making the whole region forlorn by their inaction, and conscious himself of possessing the faculty they want, does not hear his call to go and be their king?”
—Ralph Waldo Emerson (18031882)
“To the degree that respect for professors ... has risen in our society, respect for writers has fallen. Today the professorial intellect has achieved its highest public standing since the world began, while writers have come to be called men of letters, by which is meant people who are prevented by some obscure infirmity from becoming competent journalists.”
—Robert Musil (18801942)