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de and Stanisław
The Marquis de Monti, France's ambassador in Warsaw, convinced the rival Potocki and Czartoryski families to unite behind Stanisław.
de: Stanisław Marcin Ulam
de: Stanisław Wojciechowski
The Place Stanislas named after the king of Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth and duke of Lorraine Stanisław Leszczyński, Place de la Carrière, and Place d ' Alliance were added on the World Heritage Sites list by the UNESCO in 1983.
From 1725 to 1733, Stanisław lived at the Château de Chambord.
de: Fiasko ( Stanisław Lem )
de: Stanisław Saks
de: Stanisław Skrowaczewski
Kasznica used numerous nom de guerres, including Stanisław Wąsacz, Wąsowski, Przepona, Służa, Maszkowski, and Borowski.
de: Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz
de: Stanisław Witkiewicz
The next ones to drop out were: the candidate of the united groupings of the national minorities, Jan Baudouin de Courtenay and Stanisław Wojciechowski ( supported by some part of the Left ).
Józef Haller de Hallenburg ( August 13, 1873 – June 4, 1960 ) was a Lieutenant General of the Polish Army, legionary in Polish Legions, harcmistrz ( the highest Scouting instructor rank in Poland ), the President of The Polish Scouting and Guiding Association ( ZHP ), political and social activist, Stanisław Haller de Hallenburg's cousin.
* Stanisław Haller de Hallenburg
de: Stanisław Mikołajczyk
He lived in the nearby Chateau de Pignerolle from 2nd December 1939 until moving on the 10th June 1940 to London, where he joined Władysław Sikorski and Stanisław Mikołajczyk in the relocated Polish government in exile.
de: Lokaltermin ( Stanisław Lem )
On 11 September 1932, Stanisław Wigura died in an air crash in the RWD-6 during a storm, but the RWD name continued to be used for new designs ( according to a popular story, the letter W now de facto stood for engineer Jerzy Wędrychowski, but he was not a designer ).
de: Stanisław Łojasiewicz
de: Stanisław Mazur
de: Stanisław Zaremba
de: Stanisław Staszic
Stanisław Jerzy Lec ( 6 March 1909 – 7 May 1966 ) ( born Baron Stanisław Jerzy de Tusch-Letz ) was a poet and aphorist of Polish and Jewish noble origin.

Stanisław and Leśniewski
Stanisław Leśniewski and Kazimierz Ajdukiewicz were inspired by Husserl's formal analysis of language.
* Stanisław Leśniewski
Stanisław Leśniewski was perhaps the first to make widespread use of this distinction or fallacy, seeing it all around in analytic philosophy of the time, for example in Russell's Principia Mathematica ; at the logical level, a use – mention mistake occurs when two heterogeneous levels of meaning or context are confused inadvertently.
In this period Lukasiewicz and Stanisław Leśniewski founded the Lwów – Warsaw school of logic which was later made internationally famous by Alfred Tarski who had been Leśniewski's student.
* 1920 – 1939 professor at Warsaw University founds with Stanisław Leśniewski the Lwów – Warsaw school of logic ( see also Alfred Tarski, Stefan Banach, Hugo Steinhaus, Zygmunt Janiszewski, Stefan Mazurkiewicz )
* Stanisław Leśniewski
By early September he had gathered a group of mathematicians from Warsaw University and Lwów University ( most notably, founders of the Polish School of Mathematics — Stanisław Leśniewski, Stefan Mazurkiewicz and Wacław Sierpiński ), who were also able to break Russian ciphers.
Stanisław Leśniewski coined " mereology " in 1927, from the Greek word μέρος ( méros, " part "), to refer to a formal theory of part-whole he devised in a series of highly technical papers published between 1916 and 1931, and translated in Leśniewski ( 1992 ).
* Stanisław Leśniewski
Stanisław Leśniewski ( March 30, 1886 – May 13, 1939 ) was a Polish mathematician, philosopher and logician.
an: Stanisław Leśniewski
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nl: Stanisław Leśniewski
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# REDIRECT Stanisław Leśniewski
* Kazimierz Twardowski ( Vienna, 1885 – 1889 ), became father of the Lwów-Warsaw School of logic ( Jan Lukasiewicz, Stanisław Leśniewski, Tadeusz Kotarbiński, Kazimierz Ajdukiewicz and Alfred Tarski )
During the Polish – Soviet War ( 1919 – 1921 ), some one hundred Russian ciphers were broken by a sizable cadre of Polish cryptologists who included Army Lt. Jan Kowalewski and three world-famous professors of mathematics — Stefan Mazurkiewicz, Wacław Sierpiński and Stanisław Leśniewski.
Among his students were the logicians Stanisław Leśniewski, Jan Łukasiewicz and Tadeusz Czeżowski, the historian of philosophy Władysław Tatarkiewicz, the phenomenologist and aesthetician Roman Ingarden, as well as philosophers close to the Vienna Circle such as Tadeusz Kotarbiński and Kazimierz Ajdukiewicz.
* Stanisław Leśniewski

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