Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Gustave Whitehead" ¶ 132
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Gustave and Whitehead's
Gustave Whitehead and his 1901 monoplane taken near Whitehead's Pine Street shop.

Gustave and .
And in this country Gustave Weigel's delineation of the line between the sacral and secular orders during the last presidential campaign served to provide a most impressive Roman Catholic defense of the practical autonomy of both church and state.
:" Gustave was not a policeman.
* 1826 – Gustave Moreau, French painter ( d. 1898 )
* 1901 – The first claimed powered flight, by Gustave Whitehead in his Number 21.
* 1848 – Gustave Caillebotte, French painter ( d. 1894 )
Andromeda has been the subject of numerous ancient and modern works of art, including, Andromeda Chained to the Rocks ( Rembrandt ), one of Titian's poesies ( Wallace Collection ), and compositions by Joachim Wtewael ( Louvre ), Veronese ( Rennes ), Rubens, Ingres, and Gustave Moreau.
Image: Abraham and the Three Angels. png | Abraham and the three angels by Gustave Doré
Image: Jacob-angel. jpg | Jacob wrestling with the Angel, by Gustave Doré
Image: Paradiso Canto 31. jpg | Rosa Celeste: by Gustave Doré
Towards the end of this time period Gustave Eiffel used his Eiffel Tower to assist in the drop testing of flat plates.
Many artists, including Martin Schongauer, Hieronymus Bosch, Dorothea Tanning, Max Ernst, and Salvador Dalí, have depicted these incidents from the life of Anthony ; in prose, the tale was retold and embellished by Gustave Flaubert in The Temptation of Saint Anthony.
With the advent of steel, which has a high tensile strength, much larger bridges were built, many using the ideas of Gustave Eiffel.
She was described by Gustave Geffroy in 1894 as one of " les trois grandes dames " of Impressionism alongside Marie Bracquemond and Mary Cassatt.
File: The Vision of The Valley of The Dry Bones. jpg | The Vision of The Valley of The Dry Bones by Gustave Doré, 1866
Jonah preaching to the Ninevites, by Gustave Doré.
Jonah Cast Forth By The Whale, by Gustave Doré.
This combination first appeared in 1949, and is ascribed to Gustave Tops, a Belgian barman, who created it at the Hotel Metropole in Brussels in honor of Perle Mesta, then U. S. ambassador to Luxembourg.
According to Strauss and Gustave, Martel fought a brilliant battle, but realized he could not prevail because he was outnumbered so badly, and retreated.
Cerberus, as illustrated by Gustave Doré in Dante's Divine Comedy.
Pissarro studied from great forerunners, including Gustave Courbet and Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot.
Pissarro found Corot, along with the work of Gustave Courbet, to be “ statements of pictorial truth ,” writes Rewald.
Saint George and the Dragon by Gustave Moreau.
* 1957 Gustave G. Rosenberg

Whitehead's and .
English philosopher Samuel Alexander's debt to Wordsworth and Meredith is a recent interesting example, as also A. N. Whitehead's understanding of the English romantics, chiefly Shelley and Wordsworth.
Most of all, his letters to his philosophic colleagues show a magnanimity as well as an honesty which help to explain Whitehead's reference to James as `` that adorable genius ''.
Contemporary developments in logic and the foundations of mathematics, especially Bertrand Russell and Alfred North Whitehead's monumental Principia Mathematica, impressed the more mathematically minded logical positivists such as Hans Hahn and Rudolf Carnap.
This resulted in the most famous work of process philosophy, Alfred North Whitehead's Process and Reality, 1929, a work which continues that begun by Hegel but describing a more complex and fluid dynamic ontology.
Whitehead's background was an unusual one for a speculative metaphysician.
In Whitehead's Science and the Modern World ( 1925 ), he noted that the human intuitions and experiences of science, aesthetics, ethics, and religion influence the worldview of a community, but that in the last several centuries science dominates Western culture.
Whitehead's influences were not restricted to philosophers or physicists or mathematicians.
Whitehead's most far-reaching and profound and radical contribution to metaphysics is his invention of a better way of choosing the actual entities.
Potentially, each Whiteheadean occasion of experience is causally consequential on every other occasion of experience that precedes it in time, and has as its causal consequences every other occasion of experience that follows it in time ; thus it has been said that Whitehead's occasions of experience are'all window ', in contrast to Leibniz's ' windowless ' monads.
This is because occasions of experience have some topological character, expressed in Whitehead's theory of extension.
Whitehead's ontology refers to importantly structured collections of actual entities as nexuses of actual entities.
Whitehead's ontological principle is that whatever reality pertains to an abstraction is derived from the actual entities upon which it is founded or of which it is comprised.
Since, it is argued, free will is inherent to the nature of the universe, God is not omnipotent in Whitehead's metaphysics.
Whitehead's thinking here has given rise to process theology, whose prominent advocates include Charles Hartshorne, John B. Cobb, Jr., and Hans Jonas, who was also influenced by the non-theological philosopher Martin Heidegger.
However, other process philosophers have questioned Whitehead's theology, seeing it as a regressive Platonism.
Like Whitehead's God, especially as elaborated in J. J. Gibson's perceptual psychology emphasizing affordances, by ordering the relevance of eternal objects ( especially the cognitions of other such actors ), the world becomes.
In the philosophy of mathematics, some of Whitehead's ideas re-emerged in combination with cognitivism as the cognitive science of mathematics and embodied mind theses.
Hegel's Absolute idealism and Whitehead's Process philosophy were later systems.
A number of experimental rocket-propelled torpedoes were tried soon after Whitehead's invention but they were not successful.
The first of Whitehead's torpedoes had a single propeller and needed a large vane to stop it turning in a circle.
The first recorded launch of torpedoes from a torpedo boat ( which itself was launched from a torpedo boat tender ) in an actual battle was by Russian admiral Stepan Makarov on January 16, 1878, who used self-propelled Whitehead's torpedoes against a Turkish armed ship Intibah during the Russo-Turkish War of 1877-78.

0.287 seconds.