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- Title: List of Short Biographys
Matching lines:
- Archimedes (c 287-212 B.C.)
- Sir Rowland Hill (1795-1879)
- Friedrich von Schiller (1759-1805)
- Title: Short Bio of Aeschylus (c 525-456 B.C.)
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- to reconstruct, from later ancient chroniclers and historians, a tentative
- Athens and famous home of the cult of Demeter, a mystery cult which,
- His
- father was named Europhion and there is documentation of a brother who was
- to hold it against both internal and external threats. Significantly, his
- and tyranny would eventually find its way into his plays, including
- his participation as a soldier in those famous Athenian military victories
- against the Persians at Salamis and Marathon which contributed to much to
- Golden Age, before the Peloponnesian War and the teaching of the Sophists
- have fought with his brother for Greece against Persian invaders at
- Persians by Greeks; Aeschylus was around thirty-five years old at the
- the next year at Plataea. By this time, however, his career as a dramatist
- to have written his first plays around the year 500, for the legendary
- burlesque comedy. They were then judged according to high aesthetic
- his first victory in 484 and went on to win twelve more after that. In
- eighty of which are known. However, only seven tragedies of the prodigious
- His earliest existing
- play is The Persians, presented in 472. A historical tragedy about the
- Xerxes I, the play drew an invitation from Hieron I, tyrant of Syracuse,
- to performance before his court. It is highly probably Aeschylus drew on
- Maximum number of matches per file exceeded.
- Title: Short Bio of Archimedes (c 287-212 B.C.)
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- Archimedes
- studied at the famous university in Alexandria. Archimedes spent the
- remainder of his life at Syracuse, where he engaged in constant
- mathematical research. He is noted for his many mechanical inventions,
- but his first love was mathematics. His work as a pioneer in mechanics
- is illustrated by his famous remark, "Give me a place to stand and I
- Roman general, Marcellus, Archimedes was discovered drawing a mathematical
- figure in the sand beside his garden bench. Deep in meditation upon the
- problem before him, Archimedes was instantly killed when he was run
- details on the life of Archimedes, see Plutarch's Life of Marcellus.
- A complete, standard edition of the Works of Archimedes with valuable
- Title: Short Bio of Aristotle (384-322 B.C.)
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- Aristotle, a Greek philosopher, was born in Stagira, a Greek colony on
- (335-322). His treatises, in large part consisting of lectures delivered
- to his disciples in his school at Athens, may be classified as works
- in logic, metaphysics. natural science, ethics and politics, and rhetoric
- and poetics. Among his writings on logic (called later the Organon) are:
- Prior Analytics (2 books), Posterior Analytics (2 books), and Sophisms.
- His great philosophical work is Metaphysics (13 books). In the field of
- Beginning and Perishing (2 books), Parts of Animals (4 books), Generation
- of ethics and politics are: Nicomachean Ethics (10 books) and Politics
- and Poetics, of which only his treatment of tragedy and epic poetry has
- Title: Short Bio of Roger Bacon (1214-1294)
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- Pope Clement IV he wrote a series of books which amounted to an
- his work secret from his fellow Franciscans, but nonetheless, in 1278
- they imprisoned him on the charge of "suspected novelties" in his
- teaching. In his Letter on the Secret Works of Art and the Nullity
- way than one which will conceal it from the vulgar and make it
- students. ... Certain persons have achieved concealment by means of
- http://www.thehistorynet.com:80/BritishHeritage/articles/1999/05992_text.htm
- Title: Short Bio of George Berkeley (1685-1753)
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- Irish bishop and philosopher. Made a Fellow of Trinity College, Dublin,
- 1707, he was strongly influenced by the philosophical writings of
- Descartes, Newton and Locke. In 1709 his New Theory of Vision appeared,
- and in 1710 his great work, The Principles of Human Knowledge, was
- his most popular work, The Dialogues of Hylas and Philonous. Berkeley's
- literary fame rests upon this latter work, which has been described as
- "among the finest philosophical writings in the English language" on
- Bermuda. His hopes disappointed, he returned to Ireland and shortly
- his family to Oxford, where he died suddenly in January of the following
- Title: Short Bio of Pierre Jean George Cabanis (1757-1808)
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- French physiologist. A precocious child, Cabanis was enrolled at the
- of hygiene and history of medicine in the medical school of that city.
- In 1799 he was made professor of legal medicine and history of medicine.
- He was an intimate friend of Mirabeau, and attended him as physician
- in his last illness, He had a deep interest in medical and psychological
- repeatedly offered him governmental positions, Cabanis declined them,
- May 5, 1808, principally honored for his contributions to medical science,
- and especially for his main work, Rapports du physique et du moral de
- Korper, Relationship of the Soul to the Body. The thought has also been
- Title: Short Bio of Anthony Ashley Cooper (1671-1713)
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- Third Earl of Shaftesbury
- Styled "Lord Ashley" (1683-99), the Third Earl of Shaftsbury was
- a moral philosopher and author of "Characteristics of Men, Manners,
- Opinions, Times" (1711), his collected treatises.
- Title: Short Bio of Charles Robert Darwin (1809-1882)
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- recorded in his Journal of a Naturalist (1837) prepared the way for
- his famous work On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection,
- published November 24, 1859. Next in importance among his books,
- "the origin of man and his history"
- Title: Short Bio of Renatus Cartesius [Rene Descartes] (1596-1650)
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- traveler, and firm adherent of the Roman Catholic faith. His philosophical
- work, which has often been summed up in his words,
- (Cogito ergo sum), "I think, therefore I am," was given significant
- impulse by a dream he had on November 10, 1619. This revealed to him
- the method of philosophical speculation he was to follow, and his
- subsequent work is said to have stemmed from this experience.
- Title: Short Bio of Emil DuBois-Reymond (1818-1896)
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- in 1836 he entered the University of Berlin, where his teacher was
- physiology. His great work was the study of animal electricity,
- and his famous book was Researches on Animal Electricity, 1848-84. For
- he became its permanent secretary. His closest friend after Muller's
- many references to his work in lectures and writings.
- Title: Short Bio of Johann Gottlieb Fichte (1762-1814)
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- the intention of becoming a clergyman. After a teaching position in
- influence he wrote his Study for a Critique of All Revelation. The
- printer neglected to place his name on the title-page, and people
- of the author became known, Fichte was hailed as a philosopher of
- he was made Rector of the University of Berlin. His death in 1814 occurred
- when he was at the height of his fame. Rudolf Steiner made extensive
- reference to Fichte, basing his doctoral thesis (published in enlarged
- teachings, but perhaps his most memorable study of Fichte's life and
- Title: Short Bio of Johann Christoph August Franz, M.D. (1807-1839)
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- Eye surgeon, born 1807, took his medical training at the University
- of Leipzig. From Germany he emigrated to England establishing his
- treatment of illness. Two of his works were written for the public:
- Successfully Operated at the Eighteenth Year of His Age. Physiozogical
- Observations and Experiments. The latter appeared in Philosophical
- this second work of Dr. Franz.
- Title: Short Bio of Galileo Galilei von Goethe (1564-1642)
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- Born Galileo Galilei, his main contributions were, in astronomy, the
- bodies and the motions of projectiles. In the history of culture,
- Title: Short Bio of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832)
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- edited his scientific papers and published the following:
- Title: Short Biography of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832)
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- Journal, the Journal of Tiefurt, to which Goethe contributed at her
- scientific writings of Goethe at the Goethe-Schiller Archives in Weimar,
- concerning Nature, which had appeared in the Journal of Tiefurt was
- relationship to Goethe's work. In the edition of Goethe's works published
- Anthroposophical Quarterly, London, Vol. VII, No. 1, Easter, 1932, pp.
- 2-5. In his Goethe's Conception of the World, Rudolf Steiner describes
- this Fragment as "the essay in which the seeds of the later Goethean
- George Witkowski in his well-known biography of Goethe (Leipzig, 1899)
- describes this Fragment as "the seed from which came all of Goethe's
- Title: Short Bio of Ernst Heinrich Haeckel (1834-1919)
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- established for him at Jena. This position he occupied for 43 years with
- Among Haeckel's famous books are his
- Natural History of Creation (1867) and
- The Riddle of the Universe, publ. 1901. By his 60th birthday Haeckel had
- Steiner knew Haeckel personally, and in his autobiography, Chapter 15,
- great scientist. The "genealogical tree" of Haeckel to which Steiner
- and developed in his later writings.
- Title: Short Bio of Robert Hamerling (1830-1889)
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- The Austrian poet-philosopher was born March 24, 1830. Early on he
- generosity of friends led him to attend the gymnasium in Vienna,
- which swept Europe in 1848, Hamerling joined the student legion in the
- for him to hide for a long time in order to escape arrest. Later he
- studied natural science and philosophy. In 1855 he was appointed
- him finally to retire on a government pension in 1866. In comparatively
- comfortable circumstances, Hamerling spent the remainder of his life
- in his home near Graz, devoting himself to writing until his death
- poets of the Austrian school; his poems are full of life and color.”
- His most popular work was
- considered to be his masterpiece. In 1888 his
- appeared, and was reviewed with extensive comment by Rudolf Steiner. His
- was published in 1882; his novel
- (1876), described Greek life in the age of Pericles. In 1870 his drama
- was published. Rudolf Steiner commented on this drama in his Speech and
- his work appear in books and lectures by Rudolf Steiner, including the
- Title: Short Bio of Eduard von Hartmann (1842-1906)
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- took up an intensive study of philosophy. In 1869 his Philosophie
- des Unbewussten (Philosophy of the Unconscious) appeared, and made
- famous almost overnight. Of the many other works he wrote, this book
- remained his most famous. Rudolf Steiner describes a personal impression
- of von Hartmann, whom he visited in Berlin in following a philosophical
- correspondence with him over some. This account may be found in Chapter IX
- Title: Short Bio of Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1770-1831)
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- German philosopher. Born at Stuttgart, Hegel studied at Tübingen,
- where his contemporaries included Schelling and the poet Hölderlin.
- Privatdozent in philosophy. While in Jena he collaborated with
- Schelling in editing the Kritisches Journal der Philosophie,
- to which he contributed many articles. Promoted to a chair in 1805, he
- the Gymnasium in Nürnberg. In 1816 he became professor of philosophy
- in Berlin and entered into his most famous and influential period.
- an unparalleled influence on German philosophy in the 19th century.
- He was also the central philosophical influence on
- on English philosophy in the absolute idealist phrase, and although his
- he continues to be a focal point for many thinkers.
- English, including biographical studies, translations, and
- commentaries on his writings.
- Title: Short Bio of Sir Rowland Hill (1795-1879)
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- Sir Rowland Hill
- before the commission and described hi invention of
- Title: Short Bio of David Hume (1711-1776)
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- Scottish philosopher and historian. Albert Einstein wrote, "If one
- reads Hume's books, one is amazed that many sometimes highly esteemed
- philosophers after him have been able to write so much obscure stuff
- influenced the development of the best philosophers who came after him."
- Title: Short Bio of Rudolf von Ihering [Jhering] (1818-1892)
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- philosophico-historical school of law.
- Title: Short Bio of Immanuel Kant (1724-1804)
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- Immanuel Kant, German philosopher, was born in Konigsburg April 22, 1724.
- mathematics and physics. His studies were interrupted by the death of
- his father, which left him in poverty. After he supported himself by
- tutoring for 9 years, the kindness of a friend enabled him to resume
- his studies, to graduate as a doctor and to qualify as a privatdocent.
- He occupied this position for 15 years. His lectures widened from physics
- to include much philosophy. Finally, after unsuccessful attempts, in
- 1781 his Kritik der reinen Vernunft, Critique of Pure Reason appeared,
- and in 1783, his Prolegomena. After the appearance of the 2nd edition
- circles, and his views were regarded as those of an oracle. From 1792-97
- he was engaged in a struggle with the government concerning his religious
- views. In 1794 he withdrew from society, and gave up all teaching except
- for one public lecture course on logic. In 1797 Kant terminated a teaching
- February 12, 1804 near the end of his 80th year. Little more than five
- feet tall, deformed in his right shoulder, his chest almost concave, Kant
- the rest of the morning at his desk. He dined at a restaurant and spent
- hour -- a walk which for years followed exactly the same course, studied for
- especially in history, science, travel, and philosophy. He knew English
- history and literature intimately, especially in the period of Queen Anne.
- He read little of Goethe or Schiller, but often re-read Voltaire and
- Maximum number of matches per file exceeded.
- Title: Short Bio of Johannes Kepler (1571-1630)
Matching lines:
- Rudolphine Tables; moved to Sagan in Silesia (1628). Discovered the
- first two in his Astronomia Nova de Motebus Stellae Martis ex
- Observationibus Tychonis Brahe (1609) and the third in Harmonice
- Title: Short Bio of Athanasius Kircher (~1601 - 1680)
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- Athanasius Kircher was one of the most learned men of his day. He
- Egyptian antiquities and hieroglyphs. He was the first to correctly
- a large gift from the Pope for translating the hieroglyphs on an Egyptian
- obelisk! When the Rosetta stone was found, quite a bit later, this
- translation was found to be completely inaccurate. However, during his
- Title: Short Bio of Friedrich Albert Lange (1828-1875)
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- Author of Geschichte des Materialsmus, History of Materialism, publ.
- Lange issued his study on the workers' question. This made him famous
- betterment of labor conditions, and for universal education. His life,
- marked by his utter sincerity and devotion to his ideals, is an
- Title: Short Bio of Pierre Simon Marquis de Laplace (1749-1827)
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- "the Newton of France" for certain of his discoveries. In the years
- 1799-1825 his great work, the Mecanique celeste, which, as its author
- In his second great work, the Exposition du systeme du monde,
- appeared his statement of his famous "nebular hypothesis," the origins of
- which he seems to attribute to Buffon, apparently unaware that
- anticipated him in his Allgemeine Naturgeschichte,
- General History of Nature, published in 1755.
- Title: Short Bio of Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibnitz (1646-1716)
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- philosopher and mathematician, born in Leipzig and educated in Leipzig,
- controversy. While in the service of the Duke of Brunswick as librarian
- last thirty years of his life in the study of mathematics, natural science,
- philosophy, theology, history, law, politics, and other subjects. He
- composed most of his philosophical works, chiefly as essays, treatises, etc.,
- his philosophy (Leibnitzianism). His principal work in theology,
- Title: Short Bio of John Locke (1632-1704)
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- English philosopher, scholar, chemist, student of meteorology,
- Title: Short Bio of Rosa Mayreder (1858-1938)
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- in his autobiography, Chapter IX.
- Title: Short Bio of Felix Mendelssohn (1809-1847)
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- Bartholdy to his surname following his conversion to
- Christianity in early childhood. A German composer, pianist, and
- musical conductor, he was born in Hamburg. Mendelssohn made his first
- compositions at musical gatherings in his father's house. He
- formed close friendships with Weber, Goethe (1821), and Moscheles,
- 1835), which became the center of the musical world of Europe; helped
- of his sister Fanny (1805–1847), a composer and pianist,
- father of historian Karl Mendelssohn-Bartholdy (1838–1897)
- Biographical Dictionary, 1943.]
- Title: Short Bio of John Stewart Mill (1806-1873)
Matching lines:
- A stern parent, James Mill taught his son Greek at the age of three,
- to teach his sister Latin. His introduction to the utilitarian
- teachings of Bentham (the greatest happiness to the greatest number)
- at the age of fifteen was decisive for his life. His great work,
- century his influence throughout Europe was very great. Today it is
- a great philosopher but a great reformer in philosophy."
- Title: Short Bio of Paul Julius Möbius (1853-1907)
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- German neurologist known for his work relating to the
- Title: Short Bio of Johannes Peter Müller (1801-1858)
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- appointed to a professorship in physiology there in 1826. In
- Berlin University, which position he held with great honor until his
- in relation to human speech and hearing. His great work was the Handbuch
- by Dr. William Baly, publ. London 1842). This work opened a new period
- the developments in this field in the mid-19th century. In his Handbuch
- Müller developed an entirely new principle which he called "the law of
- specific energy of sense substances." This he expressed as follows: "The
- Title: Short Bio of Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche (1844-1900)
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- German philosopher and poet born near Lützen, Saxony, and educated at the
- Schopenhauer's writings. He became professor of classical philology at
- opponent of Wagner in art and philosophy, and an opponent of Schopenhauer's
- philosophy. He lived subsequently in Switzerland and Italy, and in 1889,
- suffered a mental breakdown. Nietzsche spent his last years in the care of
- his mother at Naumberg and his sister Elisabeth Förster-Nietzsche at
- and glorification of the superman or overman (Übermensch). His
- and in the Third Reich (1933). His works, chiefly on philology, music, Greek
- antiquity, and, especially philosophy, include:
- Die Philosophie im Tragischen Zeitalter der Griechen (1873),
- Also Sprach Zarathustra (proclaiming the gospel of the superman; 4 parts, 1883 ff.), which he interpreted in Jenseits von Gut und Böse (1886), and
- Title: Short Bio of Blaise Pascal (1623-1662)
Matching lines:
- Pascal's fame long ago spread far beyond the confines of his
- native France. His contributions to the establishment of the
- the study of gravity and the vacuum, and his elaboration of the theory
- of science. As a Christian thinker, his devotion to truth and piety, and
- his acceptance of mystical experience have made his name revered. His
- philosophical speculations and deep psychological insight, as well as his
- remarkable gifts as a writer of French prose have secured him a leading
- position among philosophers and literary historians. Pascal's Pensees,
- Title: Short Bio of Friedrich Paulsen (1846-1908)
Matching lines:
- German philosopher and educator. Educated at Erlangen, Bonn and
- Berlin, where he was made extraordinary professor of philosophy
- moral philosophy at Berlin. He was a pupil of G. T. Fechner,
- developing his teaching of panpsychism in his Einleitung in die
- Philosophie, Introduction to Philosophy, 1892, English transl.
- 1895. His German Education, Past and Present (English transl.
- 1907) is well known, as are his writings relative to the philosophy
- Note by Rudolf Steiner: When Paulsen (p. 15 of his System of Ethics)
- Title: Short Bio of Plato (circa 428-347 B.C.)
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- Greek philosopher, one of the most creative and influential
- thinkers in Western philosophy.
- Title: Short Bio of Pythagoras (circa 582?-500? B.C.)
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- Greek philosopher and mathematician, whose doctrines strongly
- Title: Short Bio of Johannes Rehmke (1848-1930)
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- Philosopher. His principal works are: Logik oder Philosophie als
- Wissenslehre (Logic or Philosophy as Theory of Knowledge) and
- Title: Short Bio of Jean Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778)
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- Title: Short Bio of Emperor Rudolph II (1552-1612)
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- which by that time was neither holy, Roman, nor even much of an empire.
- was then Bohemia. He buried himself in esoteric studies: alchemy,
- magician John Dee and his henchman Edward Kelley, the monk Giordano
- rhinoceros horns, exotic minerals, scientific instruments, and the like.
- Title: Short Bio of Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von Schelling (1775-1854)
Matching lines:
- Often referred to as the Proteus among philosophers, Schelling was
- noted for his ever-changing alertness and brightness of mind and
- expression. Goethe had a very high regard for him, and spoke of him
- as "the most congenial philosopher I know." Schelling had a profound
- influence among the thinkers of his time, including philosophers of
- France and England. His last years were dedicated to what he termed
- "positive philosophy," radically different from the philosophy of
- of his earlier time. Rudolf Steiner made extensive reference to
- Schelling in his writings and lectures, on various occasions praising
- that philosopher's "important inspirations and suggestions for what
- appeared in public, the short, thick-set man, with the extremely
- impressive head, and eyes which even in extreme old age were sparkling
- with fire, for from his eyes there spoke the fire of Truth, the fire of
- Perhaps Steiner's greatest study of Schelling is to be found in his
- Die Ratsel der Philosophie,
- The Riddles of Philosophy, Vol. I, Ch. 7.
- Title: Short Bio of Friedrich von Schiller (1759-1805)
Matching lines:
- Friedrich von Schiller
- German poet, dramatist, historian, and philosopher.
- Title: Short Bio of Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)
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- German philosopher. His philosophy of pessimism was presented
- of his will and therefore he lives in pain. The only escape is
- negation of the will. Ethics rests only on sympathy for the pain
- Haldane & Kemp, 1883) Ref. Book I, par. 1, Ger. ed. Biographical data
- commentaries on his ideas have been published in English translation.
- Title: Short Bio of Karl Julius Schröer (1825-1900)
Matching lines:
- in the Technical College of Vienna. In addition to his lectures on the
- history of German poetry as such, he lectured on Goethe and Schiller,
- Rudolf Steiner was a pupil of Schröer, and refers to him in detail in
- his autobiography and in lectures. It was Schröer who recommended
- of him in his Vom Menschenratsel, Riddles of Man, publ.
- Title: Short Bio of Édouard Schuré (1841-1929)
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- A French writer. The author of books on musical history and on mysticism,
- Title: Short Bio of Herbert Spencer (1820-1903)
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- principle, influencing all the sciences. To him, evolution was
- synonymous with progress. In his later development, Spencer championed
- against any form of governmental control. Before his death in 1903,
- Title: Short Bio of Benedictus de Spinoza [Baruch de Spinoza] (1632-1677)
Matching lines:
- his views. His chief work, which had a lasting influence upon future
- generations of thinkers, long after the author's death in 1677, is
- The Ethics, which has recently appeared in a new edition titled
- Title: Short Bio of David Friedrich Strauss (1808-1874)
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- a center of controversy, the intensity of which has been likened to
- that of the Thirty Year's War. This began with the appearance of his
- Life of Jesus (1835), in which he questioned the sources of the
- New Testament, and continued with his Doctrine of the Christian Faith
- (1840). From this time until his death in 1874, Strauss became
- Title: Short Bio of Rahel Varnhagen von Ense [née Levin] (1771-1833)
Matching lines:
- his wife Chaia; she died there in 1833.
- and philosophers, poets and musicians, society ladies and daughters of
- openness and tolerance. Whoever could speak declared his opinion:
- intellectual history. Felix Mendelssohn-Bartholdy, musical prodigy and
- throughout her life, which her husband published in book form after her
- Title: Short Bio of Francois Marie Arouet de Voltaire (1694-1778)
Matching lines:
- Grand. He began writing at an early age, his expert satire getting him into
- trouble from the first. While imprisoned in Bastille (1717-18), he finished
- his first tragedy, OEdipe, and began an epic poem on Henry IV of
- France. La Henriade was completed on his return from England. His
- the Lettres Anglaises ou Philosophiques, which caused an uproar
- for him to seek seclusion. In 1750 Voltaire accepted an invitation to visit
- Frederick the Great at Prussian court. There he prepared and published his
- greatest historical work Le Siècle de Louis XIV (1751).
- years of his life were spent at Ferney, near Geneva. Voltaire gained fame
- as a defender of victims of religious intolerance, but chiefly as a master
- of satire. Among his works are the tragedies Brutus (1730),
- Mérope (1743); philosophical novels Zadig (1747), and
- Candide (1759; a satire on the philosophical optimism of Pope
- and Leibnitz); Philosophical poems Le Mondain (1736),
- (1756); historical works Charles XII (1730), and
- Philosophique (1764).
- Title: Short Bio of Eduard Zeller (1814-1908)
Matching lines:
- Geschichte der deutschen Philsophie seit Leibnitz, History of
- German Philosophy Since Leibnitz, Munich, 1871-75, p. 605. Eduard
- afterward of Philosophy at Marburg. In 1862 he was made professor
- of Philosophy at Heidelberg, afterward at Berlin to his retirement
- in 1895. His masterwork is the Philosophie der Greichen,
- Philosophy of the Greeks, 1844-52. He was recognized throughout the
- academic world for his learning and contributions to scholarship, and
- received many distinctions and honors. His Philosophie der Greichen
- in 1896, as did a number of his other writings.
- Title: Short Bio of Theodor Ziehen (1862-1943)
Matching lines:
- German philosopher, psychologist, and psychiatrist. Ziehen taught
- psychiatry from 1887 to 1912, and then devoted the rest of his life
- to philosophy. Steiner speaks of his work Leitfaden der physiologischen
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