Francesco Soave (10 June 1743 â 17 January 1806) was a Swiss educator and philosopher.
Francesco Soave was born in Lugano, Switzerland, on 10 June 1743. He attended schools run by the Order of Clerics Regular of Somasca and later joined the order. Sent to Parma, he taught poetry and eloquence at the College for Noblemen and the University of Parma, under minister Guillaume du Tillot.
Soave introduced Locke's and Kant's philosophy to Italy through teaching and translations. He promoted an eclectic empiricism based on Locke, Condillac, and Bonnet. His translations of Salomon Gessner's New Idylls and Edward Young's The Force of Religion influenced the preromantic movement. In 1772, he wrote Intorno all'istituzione naturale d'una societÃÂ e d'una lingua, e all'influenza dell'una e dell'altra sulle umane cognizioni (On the natural formation of a society and language, and their influence on human knowledge).
Appointed professor of philosophy at the Brera Academy in Milan in 1772, Soave reformed teaching methods, wrote and translated educational works, and established schools in Lombardy. His educational works included children's literature. His Novelle Morali (Moral Tales) won a prize from Count Carlo Bettoni in Brescia for promoting virtue and discouraging vice in young readers. The collection, a milestone in Italian children's literature, saw over 100 editions between 1782 and 1909. In 1795, Soave wrote Vera idea della Rivoluzione di Francia (True meaning of the French Revolution), opposing revolutionary ideas, which was frequently reprinted.
He died in Pavia on 17 January 1806, while serving as professor of ideology at the university.