Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. George Henry Lewes was determined to make a lasting contribution to science. Long before he knew George Eliot, Lewes was developing his theories about the philosophical and physiological links between mind and body. Eliot’s support of Lewes’s scientific ambitions appears to have been a key reason the two became close.

  2. George Henry Lewes wurde am 18. April 1817 in London geboren und starb am 28. November 1878 ebendort. Er war ein englischer Schriftsteller, Literaturkritiker und Philosoph. Anzeige. Edition 16. Alle Werke aus dem Projekt Gutenberg-DE. Eine einmalige Bibliothek. ISBN: 9783739011899. 47,80 EUR.

  3. 13 de set. de 2020 · Por fim, ela acabou se apaixonando por outro escritor, George Henry Lewes. Refinado e famoso pela feiura, ele estava preso a um casamento com uma esposa que há muito tempo era amante de outro ...

  4. George Henry Lewes, né le 18 avril 1817 à Londres et mort le 30 novembre 1878 (à 61 ans) dans la même ville, est un philosophe et un critique littéraire britannique. Il fait partie du bouillonnement d'idées qui anima le milieu de l' ère victorienne , avec les débats sur le darwinisme , le positivisme et le scepticisme religieux .

  5. George Henry Lewes. (1817-1878) George Henry Lewes was one of the "British Emergentists," so-named by Brian McLaughlin. Lewes was an English philosopher and literary critic who invented the term " emergent ." Other emergentists included John Stuart Mill, C. Lloyd Morgan, Samuel Alexander,

  6. 1 de jan. de 2014 · Tansey EM (1990) George Eliot’s support for physiology: the George Henry Lewes trust 1879–1939. Note Rec Roy Soc Lond 44(2):221–240. Article Google Scholar Tansey EM (1992) “… the science least adequately studied in England”: physiology and the George Henry Lewes studentship, 1879–1939.

  7. George Henry Lewes, consort of George Eliot biographer of Robespierre and Goethe, novelist, editor, and critic, was also a scientist and philosopher. An intellectual figure of great importance on the Victorian scene, he has never before received adequate modern scholarly appreciation. In this book Professor Tjoa not only reconstructs Lewes’ theory of criticism and his social and political ...