Juan Benito Díaz de Gamarra y Dávalos (1745–1783) was a Mexican philosopher during the period of enlightenment in New Spain, modern-day Mexico. His thought was primarily concerned with approaching Christianity, particularly Spanish Catholicism, with the philosophical methodology of the time.
Life
editDíaz de Gamarra was born in Zamora, Michoacán. He entered the Jesuit college of San Ildefonso in Mexico City in 1756 and studied rhetoric, art, and canons. Afterward, at the age of 19, he entered the congregation of San Felipe Neri in 1764. He acted as an attorney at the congregation and traveled to Spain, Portugal and Rome between 1767 and 1770. He managed to fulfill his role as an attorney with the Iglesia del Oratorio de San Miguel el Grande a la de San Juan de Letrán. He also obtained his doctorate in canons at the University of Pisa and was granted membership at the Bolonia Academy of Sciences. At his return to Mexico in 1770 he acted as director and professor of philosophy at El Colegio de San Francisco de Sales, in San Miguel el Grande. He changed the curriculum to focus more on the best of Europe's philosophers. He was dismissed from his intellectual positions of director, professor, and prefect of studies due to his possession of prohibited books. He died on November 1, 1783.
Thought
editDíaz de Gamarra's philosophy shows an anti-peripatetic scientific attitude and constitutes a good example of eclecticism in the Hispanic enlightenment, which tries to conciliate ideas of compatible philosophical systems, referred by him as philosophical sects. He was directly influenced by René Descartes, and Tomás Vicente Tosca, and was also indirectly influenced by Leibniz through Christian Wolff. The principal values of Díaz de Gamarra can not be separated from the spirit of the Enlightenment: common sense, rationality, tolerance, and utility for man. He is considered to be a precursor of Mexican independence.
Selected works
editOf Díaz de Gamarra's principal works, one should note: Elements of modern philosophy (1774), Academias filosóficas (1774), Errors in human understanding (1781) and Memorial ajustado (1790).
References
edit- Brading, David (1993). Espiritualidad barroca, politica eclesiástica y renovación filosófica : Juan Benito Díaz de Gamarra : 1745-1783. México: Mexico : Centro de estudios de historia de mexico Condumex, 1993, cop. 1993. OCLC 958277164.
- "Juan Benito Díaz de Gamarra y Dávalos (1745-1783)". Archived from the original on 2010-11-27.
- "EMETERIO VALVERDE TÉLLEZ (1864-1948) · Crítica filosófica o Estudio bibliográfico y crítico de las obras de Filosofía escritas, traducidas o publicadas en México desde el siglo XVI hasta nuestros días (1904), Capítulo IV Influencia del Padre Gamarra en los estudios filosóficos".