Cipolla's 1988 collection pairing the Five Basic Laws of Human Stupidity with a mock-economic history of pepper — satire on the surface, diagnosis beneath.
Allegro ma non troppo, published by Il Mulino in 1988, is the slim volume that pairs two Cipolla essays: a mock-economic history of the role of spices (and especially pepper) in the development of medieval Europe, and The Basic Laws of Human Stupidity. The book was an immediate success in Italy and has been translated into dozens of languages. The title — an Italian musical direction meaning 'lively but not too much' — captures the book's register: serious scholarship delivered with sardonic humor, diagnostic compression concealed as satire.
Allegro ma non troppo
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The pepper essay is a deadpan parody of economic-historical reasoning: it argues that the European demand for pepper drove the Age of Exploration, reshaped Mediterranean commerce, and ultimately transformed Western civilization. The parody is affectionate rather than mocking — Cipolla was himself an economic historian, and the essay demonstrates his facility with the genre he gently satirizes.
The stupidity essay, which made the book famous, presents the five laws with