Yahoo España Búsqueda web

Search results

  1. Clotilde de Vaux, born Clotilde Marie (April 3, 1815 in Paris – April 5, 1846 in Paris), was a French intellectual known to have inspired the French philosopher Auguste Comte's Religion of Humanity.

  2. Clotilde de Vaux née Charlotte Clotilde Joséphine Marie [1] à Paris le 3 avril 1815 et morte le 5 avril 1846 dans la même ville, inspira à Auguste Comte la « religion de l'Humanité ».

  3. Clotilde de Vaux ( Paris, 3 de abril de 1815 – 5 de abril de 1846) foi uma escritora francesa . Destacou-se por ser a musa inspiradora de Auguste Comte, cofundadora da Religião da Humanidade .

  4. 6 de ene. de 2010 · Clotilde de Vaux, July 1845. INTRODUCTION. In late 1844, Comte met Clotilde de Vaux, the woman to whom he later attributed his emotional development and most important ideas. His disciples and most historians have generally accepted his judgment about the impact she had on his evolution.

  5. Clotilde de Vaux (1815-1846) was a novelist and essayist who became the beloved companion of philosopher Auguste Comte. She inspired his new religious philosophy, the \"Religion of Humanity\", and died of tuberculosis at his side.

  6. Clotilde de Vaux. Retrato de Louis-Jules Étex (1810-1889). Vista de la tumba. Clotilde de Vaux nació Charlotte Clotilde Josephine Marie en París el 3 de abril de 1815 y murió el 5 de abril de 1846 en la misma ciudad, Auguste Comte inspiró la “ religión de la Humanidad ”. Resumen. 1 biografía. 2 Nacimiento del positivismo religioso.

  7. Mada­me Clo­til­de de Vaux [12], así se lla­ma­ba, era mujer de prin­ci­pios. Para poseer­la era menes­ter casar­se con ella. El divor­cio no exis­tía en Fran­cia en tiem­pos de Luis Feli­pe. Comte le pro­pu­so una unión ile­gal. No la pudo obte­ner. Corrió el tiem­po, mada­me de Vaux era tísi­ca, la muer­te no tardó en pre­sen­tar­se.