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  1. Há 2 dias · Thomas Carlyle (4 December 1795 – 5 February 1881) was a Scottish essayist, historian, and philosopher from the Scottish Lowlands. A leading writer of the Victorian era, he exerted a profound influence on 19th-century art, literature, and philosophy.

  2. Há 3 dias · Mill met Thomas Carlyle during one of the latter's visits to London in the early 1830s, and the two quickly became companions and correspondents. Mill offered to print Carlyle's works at his own expense and encouraged Carlyle to write his French Revolution, supplying him with materials in order to do so

  3. Há 2 dias · Thomas Carlyle’s essay “Signs of the Times” (1829) and his early (and only) novel Sartor Resartus (1836) bear witness to the origins of thinking about literature in terms of literary ages. In a conservative fashion, these texts present an image of Romanticism that concentrates solely on subjectivity, creativity, genius, and the imagination.

  4. 6 de mai. de 2024 · Carlyle, Thomas (1795–1881) Writer and social prophet. Source: A Dictionary of Philosophy Author(s): Simon Blackburn. Carlyle was born in Ecclefechan in Scotland, but uneasily lost his *Calvinist faith, and became influenced by German *... ...

  5. Há 2 dias · Early Western scholars also often attacked the literary merit of the Quran. Orientalist Thomas Carlyle, called the Quran "toilsome reading and a wearisome confused jumble, crude, incondite" with "endless iterations, long-windedness, entanglement" and "insupportable stupidity".

  6. Há 3 dias · Hidden in the quiet back streets of Chelsea is the home of Thomas and Jane Carlyle. A twist of fate turned Carlyle into a star of the 19th-century literary world. Suddenly this was the place to be.

  7. 22 de mai. de 2024 · Thomas Carlyle and John Rawls each offer divergent forms of philosophical constructivism in their deliberations on social and distributive justice. Carlyle constructs an account of social justice from a social vantage point of alienation and omniscience in Sartor Resartus while Rawls constructs an account of social justice from a “veil of ignorance” as a social vantage point in A Theory of ...