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  1. ジョージ・ヘンリー・ルイス (/ ˈluːɪs /(試聴); 1817年4月18日-1878年11月30日)は、英国の哲学者であり、文学や劇場の批評家でした。. 彼はアマチュア生理学者でもありました。. アメリカのフェミニスト、マーガレット・フラーは、ルイスを「機知に富ん ...

  2. 7 de abr. de 2024 · Search for: 'G. H. Lewes' in Oxford Reference ». (1817–78),a versatile writer, was author of plays, essays (notably on Comte and Hegel), Ranthorpe (1847), a novel in imitation of Goethe; and a popular history of philosophy from F. Bacon to Comte (Biographical History of Philosophy, 1845–6). His liaison with George Eliot, dating from 1854 ...

  3. George Henry Lewes’s magnum opus, Problems of Life and Mind (1874—79), sits at a nexus between two eras in British history and in the development of psychology. His most mature contribution to the physiological psychology field, part of the “new psychology” school which emerged in the mid-to-late nineteenth century, Problems is a sprawling, multi-volume composition that combines both ...

  4. George Henry Lewes fue un filósofo y crítico literario británico. También fue fisiólogo aficionado. La feminista americana Margaret Fuller lo describió como «un tipo de hombre ingenioso, francés, frívolo». Lewes se unió a la corriente victoriana de ideas que estimulaban el debate del darwinismo, el positivismo y el escepticismo religioso. No obstante, quizás hoy es más conocido ...

  5. No. 2086: George Henry Lewes. by John H. Lienhard. Audio. Today, a man of letters. The University of Houston's College of Engineering presents this series about the machines that make our civilization run, and the people whose ingenuity created them. I' ve always stuttered-stepped over the Victorian term: man of letters.

  6. George Henry Lewes from the contraction of a sensitive polyp when irritated through the development of specialized tissues - specifying nerves for irritation and muscles for movement. The simple reflex is the transitional point dif-ferentiating the nervous from the merely physical (Problems of Life and Mind: Third Series, pp. 244, 266, 374).

  7. Role of GeoRGe HenRy lewes in GeoRGe eliot’s CaReeR 3 There are no extant letters exchanged by Lewes and Eliot, nor have any journals survived from the years when they first became a couple. Nevertheless, we do find declarations of love and affection in the remaining journals and in outgoing correspondence to others.