Gemelli's Institute of Psychology was the most prominent institution of its kind in Italy. In 1959 he founded a teaching hospital for the Medical School of the university, located in Rome, the Agostino Gemelli University Polyclinic, which is now named after him. He has become notorious in historical analyses for some racist statements leading up to the Second World War and his rabid support for Benito Mussolini. He focused some of his research on the psychology of the workplace.
Gemelli, who had been an agnostic from his upbringing, had a religious conversion from his experience of military service in a hospital, that brought him into contact with a chaplain there who impressed him deeply. This led him to join the Order of Friars Minor in 1903, at which time he took the name Agostino. He was professed in the Order on 23 December 1904, and ordained on 14 March 1908. As members of religious orders were barred by the Catholic Church from practising medicine then, he continued his medical research, moving into the field of neuropsychology, where he was dissatisfied with many of the theories regarding the central nervous system held at the time.
Gemelli founded the Catholic University in 1921,[6] and soon gained the patronage of Pope Benedict XV.[7] It was founded as an instrument of forming a new leadership class for a future Catholic state. This religiously motivated political goal was intended to counteract the anti-clerical state established by the unifiers of modern Italy in 1860.[8]
In 1929 the Holy See signed a Concordat with the government of Benito Mussolini, which made the Catholic Church the state religion of Italy. At that point, the university became a laboratory for Catholic social policies through which the church might bring the Fascist state in line with canon law and papal teachings.[9] Gemelli taught as a professor of Applied Psychology at the university.
Despite Gemelli's accommodations to the state, he maintained relative autonomy for his university. This allowed the left wing of the Christian Democratic Party to organize and develop at the Università Cattolica during Mussolini's peak years.[9]
Antisemitism
Gemelli's is considered as a supporter of Mussolinian state antisemitism:
He wrote a controversial and notoriously vicious article about antisemitism against the Jewish intellectual and Italian socialist philosopher Felice Momigliano in 1924 (the article was published unsigned on Vita e pensiero and recognized later on).
He moved away from socialism and gradually favoured and supported the Fascist regime's racial laws in 1938 began by Mussolini and influenced by Adolf Hitler, which were aimed primarily at Jews.[10][11]
Gemelli is also considered[by whom?] one of the 20th century's most prominent Franciscans. He worked to reconcile Christian faith and modern culture, though questions have arisen about his political legacy in recent times.[13]
Despite his many administrative duties as University Rector (which he performed until his death), Gemelli's endeavours involved both scientific and philosophical studies. At the request of Pope Pius XI, he also served as the first President of the Pontifical Academy of Sciences (1937). In addition, he wrote extensively on the contemporary meaning of Franciscan spirituality and was a pioneer in actively engaging the laity in the mission of the church.
Publications
Rivista di filosofia neoscolastica (1908)
La lotta contro Lourdes (1911), a book in which he took on the medical establishment of Milan regarding the scientific reliability of cures claimed at the Shrine of Our Lady of Lourdes in France, noted for the great number of healings taking place there
Vita e Pensiero (1914)
Biologie (1939)
La psicotecnica applicata alle industrie (1944)
La psicologia dell'orientamento professionale (1945)
Psicologia dell'età evolutiva, with Agatha Sidlauskas (1946)
La personalità del delinquente (1946)
Introduzione alla psicologia, with Giorgio Zunini (1947)
La criminologia e il diritto penale (1951)
Archivi della Psicología, Neurología e Psichiatría
Associazione Cattolica Internazionale degli Studi Medicali-Psicologici
Padre Pio controversy
Agostino Gemelli was a harsh critic of Padre Pio; calling him, "an ignorant and self-mutilating psychopath who exploited people's credulity" with his stigmata. Gemelli's criticism is believed to have been instrumental in moving the Vatican to take various measures in censuring Padre Pio, including a prohibition on celebrating Mass in public.[14]
^Original Italian: A San Giorgio furono spesso in visita anche il vescovo castrense Mons. Angelo Bartolomasi e padre Gemelli, allora Maggiore medico direttore dell'ufficio di Psichiatria di Milano, e prezioso collaboratore del Vescovo dei capellani militari nei raduni sacerdotali
Foschi, R.; Giannone, A.; Giuliani, A. (2013). "Italian psychology under protection: Agostino Gemelli between Catholicism and fascism". History of Psychology. 16 (2): 130–144. doi:10.1037/a0029676. PMID23668919.
Falconi, Bruno (2007). "[A topical subject in the Lombardy of 1906: the regeneration of nerves]". Medicina Nei Secoli. 19 (2): 361–71. PMID18450021.
Lomonaco, T (November 1978). "[Agostino Gemelli, one of the most important founders and promoters of aeronautical medicine in Italy]". Minerva Medica. 69 (53): 3615–9. PMID366463.
Barraciu, A (April 1967). "[A worthy monument to Agostino Gemelli: the Policlinico Universitario della "Cattolica"]". Minerva Medica. 58 (28 Suppl): 471–2. PMID5337629.
BIZZARRINI, G (January 1951). "[The stigmata of St. Francis of Assisi seen by the Franciscan friar Agostino Gemelli; an eloquent lesson by the famous biologist, psychologist and psychiatrist.]". Minerva Medica. 42 (1): Varia, 10–3. PMID14826556.