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  1. Amos Bronson Alcott dedicated his life to various intellectual and social movements, including Transcendentalism, abolitionism, and education reform. Amos Bronson Alcott spent his early years in rural west-central Connecticut with his parents and seven siblings. 1 As a young child, he discovered a love for reading which likely influenced his later passion for learning and education. 2 Alcott ...

  2. Amos Bronson Alcott (29 novembre 1799 – 4 mars 1888) est un professeur, enseignant, écrivain et philosophe américain connu pour ses idées progressistes et ses deux projets utopiques avortés, dans les années 1830 et 1880, fondés sur des méthodes éducatives non conventionnelles et sur un mode de vie communautaire et connus ...

  3. Amos Bronson Alcott. Amos Bronson Alcott (Wolcott, 29 novembre 1799 – Boston, 4 marzo 1888) è stato un educatore, insegnante e filosofo statunitense.Fu il padre di Louisa May Alcott, autrice dei romanzi della serie Piccole donne.Viene ricordato per aver fondato una comunità utopica conosciuta come Fruitlands e per aver aderito alla filosofia trascendentalista

  4. Born in 1799 to an illiterate flax farmer in Wolcott, Connecticut, Amos Bronson Alcott was singular among the Transcendentalists in his unassailable optimism and the extent of his self-education. With the encouragement of his spirited and resourceful mother, he taught himself to read and write by forming letters in charcoal on the kitchen ...

  5. Ever and always a teacher, Amos Bronson Alcott began his literary career by publishing articles and books describing his teaching methods and pedagogical philosophy. He published articles in both the American Journal of Education and its successor, the American Annals of Education and Instruction.His first standalone work was a 27-page pamphlet, Observations on the Principles and Methods of ...

  6. Amos Bronson Alcott (November 29, 1799 – March 4, 1888) was an American writer, philosopher, and educator.He is best remembered for founding a short-lived and unconventional "Temple School" in Boston, as well as the utopian community known as "Fruitlands." He was also notably associated with transcendentalism, writing a series known as "Orphic Sayings," which were originally published in the ...

  7. Amos Bronson Alcott (1799–1888) was a philosopher, educational innovator, author, diarist, and ardent reformer who founded a short-lived utopian society, Fruitlands, and was one of the New England Transcendentalists of Concord, Massachusetts.Indeed, Alcott was a founder of American Transcendentalism, the name given to a specific type of idealism that was prevalent, particularly in New ...