Encyclopedia of Nineteenth Century ThoughtGregory Claeys Routledge, 2004 M08 2 - 568 páginas Encyclopedia of Nineteenth Century Thought provides essential information on, and a critical interpretation of, nineteenth-century thought and nineteenth-century thinkers. The project takes as its temporal boundary the period 1789 to 1914. Encyclopedia of Nineteenth Century Thought primarily covers social and political thinking, but key entries also survey science, religion, law, art, concepts of modernity, the body and health, and so on, and thereby take into account all of the key developments in the intellectual history of the period. The encyclopedia is alphabetically organized, and consists of: * principal entries, divided into ideas (4000 words) and persons (2500 words) * subsidiary entries of 1000 words, which are entirely biographical * informational entries of 500 words, which are also biographical. |
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Página xiii
... thinkers of the age, John Stuart Mill and Karl Marx, both acknowledged, the ruling ideas of the age were the ideas of its dominant classes. Yet both liberalism and industrialism met with a substantial challenge from the most important ...
... thinkers of the age, John Stuart Mill and Karl Marx, both acknowledged, the ruling ideas of the age were the ideas of its dominant classes. Yet both liberalism and industrialism met with a substantial challenge from the most important ...
Página xiv
... thinkers, whose world-view when combined with other trends in religious criticism was deeply unsettling to theologians and moral philosophers in particular, but increasingly also to the wider public. No longer the benign extension of ...
... thinkers, whose world-view when combined with other trends in religious criticism was deeply unsettling to theologians and moral philosophers in particular, but increasingly also to the wider public. No longer the benign extension of ...
Página 2
... thinkers, however, there is no such conflict between intrinsic aesthetic qualities and external reference, so that aesthetic order can be understood as corresponding to an order that really exists outside the work of art, and which can ...
... thinkers, however, there is no such conflict between intrinsic aesthetic qualities and external reference, so that aesthetic order can be understood as corresponding to an order that really exists outside the work of art, and which can ...
Página 3
... thinker, but whose actual acquaintance with German Idealist philosophy appears to have been scanty at best. Common Sense philosophy's importance for nineteenth-century thinking about aesthetics lies in its development of Berkeley's ...
... thinker, but whose actual acquaintance with German Idealist philosophy appears to have been scanty at best. Common Sense philosophy's importance for nineteenth-century thinking about aesthetics lies in its development of Berkeley's ...
Página 7
... thinkers could build, either through development or rejection. The thinkers of the first half of the nineteenth century had to face an issue that their forerunners had largely chosen to set aside, slavery. Those in the second half of ...
... thinkers could build, either through development or rejection. The thinkers of the first half of the nineteenth century had to face an issue that their forerunners had largely chosen to set aside, slavery. Those in the second half of ...
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aesthetic anarchism argued AUGUSTE COMTE became believed benefits Britain British Christian civil colonial Comte concept conflict conservatism constitutional critical critique culture Darwinism defined democracy democratic early economic elite Emerson empire essays ethical Europe European figure final finally find first Fourier France French Revolution Further reading German Hegel Hegelian human ideal ideas identified imperial important individual industrial influence influential intellectual John John Stuart Mill Kant Karl Marx labour later lectures liberal liberty London Marxism ment meritocracy Mill modern moral movement nature Nietzsche nineteenth century nomic organization Oxford Paris philosophy political economy popular principle progress psychology published race radical reflected reform religion religious republican revolutionary role Romantic Romanticism Ruskin Russian Saint-Simon Saint-Simonian scientific significant Slavophiles social Social Darwinism socialist society sociology specific suffrage theory thinkers thought tical tion tradition utopian women women’s rights writings