Giorgio Prodi
Giorgio Prodi (August 12, 1928, Scandiano, Italy – December 4, 1987, Bologna, Italy) was an Italian medical scientist, oncologist and semiotician.
He studied medicine and chemistry at the University of Bologna. From 1958, he taught general pathology and experimental oncology in the same university. He held Italy's first Chair of Oncology. In 1973 he founded the Institute of Cancerology at Bologna, of which he became the first director.[1]
He published a series of books on the philosophy of medicine and biology.[2] Together with Thomas Sebeok and Thure von Uexküll, he developed a semiotic approach in biology (biosemiotics) in his works of the 1970s and 1980s.[3]
He was also a writer of fiction.[4] His semi-autobiographical novel Lazzaro (a fictionalised biography of his fellow Scandianese and fellow scientist Lazzaro Spallanzani) was awarded the Premio Grinzane Cavour in 1986.[5]
The Institute of Cancerology in the University of Bologna was renamed the "Giorgio Prodi" Centre of Cancer Research in his honour. The Giorgio Prodi Lecture Hall in the former monastery of San Giovanni in Monte is also named after him.
Personal life
He was the brother of mathematician Giovanni Prodi, physicist and politician Vittorio Prodi, and economist Romano Prodi, former Prime Minister of Italy and President of the European Commission.
References
- Felice Cimatti, The circular semiosis of Giorgio Prodi. Sign Systems Studies 28 (2000): 351-379.
- La scienza, il potere, la critica. Bologna: Il Mulino, 1974; Le basi materiali della significazione. Milano: Bompiani, 1977; La storia naturale della logica. Milano: Bompiani, 1982; Teoria e metodo in biologia e medicina. Bologna: Editrice CLUEB, 1988.
- Le basi materiali della significazione. Milano: Bompiani, 1977. A shorter version was published in English as Material bases of signification. Semiotica 69 (1988): 191-241. See Thomas Sebeok, The Estonian connection. Sign Systems Studies 26 (1998): 20-41.
- Now collected and republished as Giorgio Prodi, L'opera letteraria. Reggio Emilia: Diabasis, 2009.
- Lazzaro. Il romanzo di un naturalista del '700. Brescia: Camunia, 1985.