Values, Virtues, and Vices, Italian Style illustrates the story of the
evolution of Italian values, virtues, and vices is a narrative of
longing, exhilaration, and devastation, a journey of the spirit that all
human beings necessarily undertake but navigate with varying degrees of
success. The lives of Caesar, Dante, Machiavelli, and Garibaldi
demonstrate how we can lead staunchly meaningful lives even within an
inherently meaningless universe. The ambition of this work is nothing
more, nothing less, than entangling, through a careful examination of
the values, virtues, and vices of four famous historical figures, a host
of overlapping but distinct concepts, such as pride, honor,
justification, excuse, repentance, and forgiveness that frame human
existence. Belliotti's objective is that by conducting such an
interdisciplinary inquiry we might better position ourselves to craft
our characters within the limitations enjoined by our cosmic
circumstances. As always, however, we must deliberate, choose, and act
under conditions of inescapable uncertainty; assume responsibility for
the people we are becoming; and, hopefully, depart the planet with honor
and merited pride. Along the way, we might even magnify our link in the
generational chain that defines our identity.