Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Jean-Jacques Rousseau" ¶ 27
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Rousseau's and novel
In Rousseau's mind, she became identified with a character in the great novel he was then writing, Julie, ou la Nouvelle Héloïse.
* Jean-Jacques Rousseau's novel, Julie, ou la nouvelle Héloïse, refers to the history of Heloise and Pierre Abélard.
Scholars have also tried to analyze the influence this liaison might have had on the composition of the novel and the evolution of Rousseau's ideas.
" Hymn to Intellectual Beauty " is an 84-line ode that was influenced by Jean-Jacques Rousseau's novel of sensibility Julie, or the New Heloise and William Wordsworth's " Ode: Intimations of Immortality ".

Rousseau's and Julie
It is thought that the virtuous atheist Wolmar in Jean-Jacques Rousseau's Julie, ou la nouvelle Héloïse is based on d ' Holbach.
Here he became intimate with Jean-Jacques Rousseau's friend Julie de Bondeli.
Rousseau's Julie ou la Nouvelle Héloïse ( 1761 ) as leading an expedition around the world which the novel's protagonist, St. Preux, is urged to join by his friend, Mylord Edouard ( himself a friend of Anson's ), so as to separate him from Julie, who is married to Mr de Wolmar.
Enhancing the elegiac mood of these views were the altars and monuments, the ' Rustic Temple ', and other details meant to evoke Rousseau's Julie, ou la nouvelle Héloïse.

Rousseau's and la
Among Rousseau's definitions of law, the textually closest variant can be found in a passage of the Lettres écrites de la montagne summarizing the argument of Du contrat social, in which law is defined as " a public and solemn declaration of the general will on an object of common interest.

Rousseau's and Héloïse
St-Preux, a neo-romantic hero, will come back ( he who wanted to die ) after " having much suffered, and having seen even more suffering ..." This tale of thwarted love (" Héloïse " refers to the history of Héloïse and Abélard ) was a best-seller at the time, Rousseau's book so scrambled after that it was rented by the hour in the book-shops.

Rousseau's and was
Rousseau's conception of alpine purity was later emphasized with the publication of Albrecht von Haller's poem Die Alpen that described the mountains as an area of mythical purity.
Jean-Jacques Rousseau's father Isaac was not in the city at this time, but Jean-Jacques's grandfather supported Fatio and was penalized for it.
Rousseau's father, Isaac Rousseau, was a watchmaker who, notwithstanding his artisan status, was well educated and a lover of music.
In listening to barcaroles, I found I had not yet known what singing was ... — Confessions Rousseau's employer routinely received his stipend as much as a year late and paid his staff irregularly.
Rousseau's 1750 " Discourse on the Arts and Sciences " was awarded the first prize and gained him significant fame.
Sophie was the cousin and houseguest of Rousseau's patroness and landlady Madame d ' Epinay, whom he treated rather highhandedly.
Rousseau's choice of a Catholic vicar of humble peasant background ( plausibly based on a kindly prelate he had met as a teenager ) as a spokesman for the defense of religion was in itself a daring innovation for the time.
Rousseau's letter to Hume, in which he articulates the perceived misconduct, sparked an exchange which was published in Paris and received with great interest at the time.
One of Rousseau's last pieces of writing was a critical yet enthusiastic analysis of Gluck's opera Alceste.
In 2002, the Espace Rousseau was established at 40 Grand-Rue, Geneva, Rousseau's birthplace.
The kind of republican government of which Rousseau approved was that of the city state, of which Geneva was a model, or would have been, if renewed on Rousseau's principles.
France could not meet Rousseau's criterion of an ideal state because it was too big.
Such was not Rousseau's meaning.
At the time, however, Rousseau's strong endorsement of religious toleration, as expounded by the Savoyard vicar in Émile, was interpreted as advocating indifferentism, a heresy, and led to the condemnation of the book in both Calvinist Geneva and Catholic Paris.
Rousseau's idea of the volonté générale (" general will ") was not original with him but rather belonged to a well-established technical vocabulary of juridical and theological writings in use at the time.
Burke's " Letter to a Member of the National Assembly ", published in February 1791, was a diatribe against Rousseau, whom he considered the paramount influence on the French Revolution ( his ad hominem attack did not really engage with Rousseau's political writings ).
On similar grounds, one of Rousseau's strongest critics during the second half of the 20th century was political philosopher Hannah Arendt.
It was Rousseau's fellow philosophe, Voltaire, objecting to Rousseau's egalitarianism, who charged him with primitivism and accused him of wanting to make people go back and walk on all fours.
An early critic of social contract theory was Rousseau's friend, the philosopher David Hume, who in 1742 published an essay " Of Civil Liberty ", in whose second part, entitled, " Of the Original Contract ", he stressed that the concept of a " social contract " was a convenient fiction:

Rousseau's and published
Virtually, all our information about Rousseau's youth has come from his posthumously published Confessions, in which the chronology is somewhat confused, though recent scholars have combed the archives for confirming evidence to fill in the blanks.
Frontispiece and title page of an edition of Rousseau's Discourse on Inequality ( 1754 ), published in 1755 in Holland.
It originally appeared in Book VI of the first part ( finished in 1767, published in 1782 ) of Rousseau's putative autobiographical work, Les Confessions.
As a student, he published his first two works, Observations sur Émile ( on Jean-Jacques Rousseau's Emile: Or, On Education ) in 1763 and Des Préjugés in 1764.
Frontispiece and title page of an edition of Rousseau's Discourse on Inequality ( 1754 ), published by Marc-Michel Rey in 1755 in Holland.
He has published three books: Fichte's Theory of Subjectivity ( Cambridge University Press, 1990 ); Foundations of Hegel's Social Theory: Actualizing Freedom ( Harvard University Press, 2000 ), which argues for the centrality of " social freedom " in Hegel's political thought ; and " Rousseau's Theodicy of Self-Love: Evil, Rationality, and the Drive for Recognition.
Covering the first fifty-three years of Rousseau's life, up to 1765, it was completed in 1769, but not published until 1782, four years after Rousseau's death, even though Rousseau did read excerpts of his manuscript publicly at various salons and other meeting places.
Besides the above, he published many works on antiquarian, economic and other subjects, including L ' Uomo libero, in confutation of Rousseau's Contrat Social ; an attack upon the abbe Tartarotti's assertion of the existence of magicians ; Observazioni sulla musica antica e moderna ; and several poems.
The Government of Poland was not published until after Rousseau's death.

Rousseau's and .
The importance of Rousseau's twist has not always been clear to us, however.
Sherman insisted that cavalry could not successfully break up hostile railways, yet Garrard's Covington raid and Rousseau's Opelika raid cut two-thirds of the rail lines he had to break and Sherman lived in mortal fear of what Forrest might do to his communications.
Rousseau's primitivism, the anti-Newtonian mythology of Blake, Coleridge's organic metaphysics, Victor Hugo's image of the poets as the Magi, and Shelley's `` unacknowledged legislators '' are related elements in the rear-guard action fought by the romantics against the new scientific rationalism.
Following the trend of Romanticism, which greatly emphasised the role and the nature of the individual, and in the footsteps of Jean-Jacques Rousseau's Confessions, a more intimate form of autobiography, exploring the subject's emotions, came into fashion.
In this piece, the artist references Enlightenment values while alluding to Rousseau's social contract.
Here we see the clear division of male-female attributes which confined the sexes to specific roles, under Rousseau's popular doctrines.
Rousseau's autobiographical writings — his Confessions, which initiated the modern autobiography, and his Reveries of a Solitary Walker — exemplified the late 18th-century movement known as the Age of Sensibility, featuring an increasing focus on subjectivity and introspection that has characterized the modern age.
Rousseau's mother, Suzanne Bernard Rousseau, the daughter of a Calvinist preacher, died of puerperal fever nine days after his birth.
To avoid certain defeat in the courts, he moved away to Nyon in the territory of Bern, taking Rousseau's aunt Suzanne with him.
In an irony of fate, Rousseau's later injunction to women to breastfeed their own babies ( as had previously been recommended by the French natural scientist Buffon ), probably saved the lives of thousands of infants.
Rousseau's ideas were the result of an almost obsessive dialogue with writers of the past, filtered in many cases through conversations with Diderot.
The mestizo Pierre Alexandre du Peyrou, rich inhabitant of Neufchâtel, plantation owner, writer, friend and publisher of some of Rousseau's oeuvre.
Rousseau's break with the Encyclopedistes coincided with the composition of his three major works, in all of which he emphasized his fervent belief in a spiritual origin of man's soul and the universe, in contradistinction to the materialism of Diderot, La Mettrie, and d ' Holbach.
A sympathetic observer, British philosopher David Hume, " professed no surprise when he learned that Rousseau's books were banned in Geneva and elsewhere.
Although a celebrity, Rousseau's mental health did not permit him to enjoy his fame.

0.202 seconds.