José Ingenieros
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José Ingenieros (born Giuseppe Ingegnieri, April 24, 1877Template:Spaced ndashOctober 31, 1925) was an Argentine physician, pharmacist, positivist philosopher and essayist.[1][2]
He was born in Palermo (Italy), and graduated from the University of Buenos Aires School of Medicine in 1900. Ingenieros was philosophically influenced by Herbert Spencer and Auguste Comte, and wrote a very important philosophical and social work, "El hombre mediocre" (The Mediocre Man), in 1913. Ingenieros founded the Buenos Aires Institute of Criminology in 1907 and the Argentine Psychological Society in 1908; he was elected President of the Argentine Medical Association in 1909.
Ingenieros married Eva Rutenberg, in Lausanne, in 1914. Appointed Assistant Dean of the School of Philosophy and Letters of his alma mater, he played a prominent role in the landmark University reform in Argentina, in 1918. He resigned his academic posts in 1919 to join Claridad, a communist organization, and in 1922, formed Unión Latinoamerica, a political action committee focused on anti-imperialism. He was an active Freemason since 1898.[3] He founded a monthly, Renovación, in 1925, but died in Buenos Aires later that year.
References
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Sources
- Encyclopedia Americana (United States: Encyclopedia Americana Corporation, 1969 edition), pg 172
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- 1877 births
- 1925 deaths
- Argentine people of Italian descent
- Atheist philosophers
- Argentine activists
- Academic staff of the University of Buenos Aires
- Argentine essayists
- Argentine male essayists
- Argentine male writers
- Physicians from Buenos Aires
- 20th-century Argentine philosophers
- Argentine Freemasons
- Comtism
- Argentine psychologists
- University of Buenos Aires alumni
- Burials at La Chacarita Cemetery
- Italian emigrants to Argentina
- Argentine communists
- Argentine atheists
- 19th-century atheists
- 20th-century atheists
- 20th-century Argentine physicians