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  1. 15 de abr. de 2024 · 3,400 words. Syndicate this essay. ‘Philosophical theories are much more like good stories than scientific explanations.’. This provocative remark comes from the paper ‘Linguistic Philosophy and Perception’ (1953) by Margaret Macdonald. Macdonald was a figure at the institutional heart of British philosophy in the mid- 20th century ...

  2. Há 5 dias · Born 1864. Died 1933. Nationality Scottish. Birth place Tipton, Staffordshire. Death place Chelsea. Margaret Macdonald Mackintosh was, alongside her husband Charles Rennie Mackintosh, one of the key figures in the emergence of the ‘Glasgow Style’ in the 1890s. Born near Wolverhampton, she settled in Glasgow in the late 1880s.

  3. Margaret Macdonald (1864-1933) Margaret Macdonald was one of the most gifted and successful women artists in Scotland at the turn of the century. Her output was wide-ranging and included watercolours, graphics, metalwork and textiles. Arguably her greatest achievements were in gesso, a plaster-based medium, which she used to make decorative ...

  4. Margaret MacDonald Mackintosh (née le 5 novembre 1864 à Tipton, près de Wolverhampton et morte le 10 janvier 1933 à Londres) est une artiste britannique, dont l'œuvre originale — que l'on peut rattacher au courant Art nouveau — a permis de définir le Glasgow Style, qui connait un grand succès pendant la dernière décennie du XIX e siècle et le début du XX e siècle.

  5. Maggie Macdonald (1952–2016), Scottish singer. Maggie MacDonald (born 1978), Canadian writer and musician. Margaret McDonald (voice actress) (born 1988), American voice actress. Margaret Read MacDonald (born 1940), American storyteller, folklorist, and author of children's books. Margaret Evangeline McDonald, ambassador to the United States ...

  6. 31 de out. de 2019 · Margaret Macdonald Mackintosh was born 155 years ago, on November 5, 1864, with her impact on her husband's work still widely debated. PIC: Glasgow School of Art Archive.

  7. Margaret Macdonald Mackintosh was instrumental in shaping the Glasgow Style, a design movement that drew on themes from the Arts and Crafts school. Bold, energetic Charles Rennie Mackintosh’s Wife works went beyond decoration; they conveyed symbolic significance. Her depictions of flowing lines and figures, with all the natural detail ...