Habit and Intelligence in Their Connexion with the Laws of Matter and Force by Joseph John Murphy
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Page : 384 pages
File Size : 22,90 MB
Release : 1869
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Author :
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Page : 384 pages
File Size : 22,90 MB
Release : 1869
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Author : Joseph John Murphy
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Page : 384 pages
File Size : 50,15 MB
Release : 1869
Category : Biology
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Author : Joseph John Murphy
Publisher : London : Macmillan
Page : 264 pages
File Size : 42,22 MB
Release : 1869
Category : Biology
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Author : Joseph John Murphy
Publisher :
Page : 388 pages
File Size : 13,54 MB
Release : 1869
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Author : Thalia Trigoni
Publisher : Routledge
Page : 212 pages
File Size : 44,95 MB
Release : 2020-11-16
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 100022659X
This book reassesses the philosophical, psychological and, above all, the literary representations of the unconscious in the early twentieth century. This period is distinctive in the history of responses to the unconscious because it gave rise to a line of thought according to which the unconscious is an intelligent agent able to perform judgements and formulate its own thoughts. The roots of this theory stretch back to nineteenth-century British physiologists. Despite the production of a number of studies on modernist theories of the relation of the unconscious to conscious cognition, the degree to which the notion of the intelligent unconscious influenced modernist thinkers and writers remains understudied. This study seeks to look back at modernism from beyond the Freudian model. It is striking that although we tend not to explore the importance of this way of thinking about the unconscious and its relationship to consciousness during this period, modernist writers adopted it widely. The intelligent unconscious was particularly appealing to literary authors as it is intertwined with creativity and artistic novelty through its ability to move beyond discursive logic. The book concentrates primarily on the works of D. H. Lawrence, Virginia Woolf and T.S. Eliot, authors who engaged the notion of the intelligent unconscious, reworked it and offered it for the consumption of the general populace in varied ways and for different purposes, whether aesthetic, philosophical, societal or ideological.
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Page : 566 pages
File Size : 37,89 MB
Release : 1867
Category : American literature
ISBN :
A review and record of current literature.
Author : Charles Darwin
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 913 pages
File Size : 19,38 MB
Release : 2016-12-01
Category : Science
ISBN : 1316851737
This volume is part of the definitive edition of letters written by and to Charles Darwin, the most celebrated naturalist of the nineteenth century. Notes and appendixes put these fascinating and wide-ranging letters in context, making the letters accessible to both scholars and general readers. Darwin depended on correspondence to collect data from all over the world, and to discuss his emerging ideas with scientific colleagues, many of whom he never met in person. The letters are published chronologically: volume 24 includes letters from 1876, the year in which Darwin published Cross and Self Fertilisation in the Vegetable Kingdom, and started writing Forms of Flowers. In 1876, Darwin's daughter-in-law, Amy, died shortly after giving birth to a son, Bernard Darwin, an event that devastated the family. The volume includes a supplement of 182 letters from earlier years, including a newly discovered collection of letters from William Darwin, Darwin's eldest son.
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Page : 454 pages
File Size : 34,60 MB
Release : 1892
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Author : Helge S. Kragh
Publisher : Routledge
Page : 344 pages
File Size : 32,96 MB
Release : 2016-04-29
Category : History
ISBN : 1317142470
Entropic Creation is the first English-language book to consider the cultural and religious responses to the second law of thermodynamics, from around 1860 to 1920. According to the second law of thermodynamics, as formulated by the German physicist Rudolf Clausius, the entropy of any closed system will inevitably increase in time, meaning that the system will decay and eventually end in a dead state of equilibrium. Application of the law to the entire universe, first proposed in the 1850s, led to the prediction of a future 'heat death', where all life has ceased and all organization dissolved. In the late 1860s it was pointed out that, as a consequence of the heat death scenario, the universe can have existed only for a finite period of time. According to the 'entropic creation argument', thermodynamics warrants the conclusion that the world once begun or was created. It is these two scenarios, allegedly consequences of the science of thermodynamics, which form the core of this book. The heat death and the claim of cosmic creation were widely discussed in the period 1870 to 1920, with participants in the debate including European scientists, intellectuals and social critics, among them the physicist William Thomson and the communist thinker Friedrich Engels. One reason for the passion of the debate was that some authors used the law of entropy increase to argue for a divine creation of the world. Consequently, the second law of thermodynamics became highly controversial. In Germany in particular, materialists and positivists engaged in battle with Christian - mostly Catholic - scholars over the cosmological consequences of thermodynamics. This heated debate, which is today largely forgotten, is reconstructed and examined in detail in this book, bringing into focus key themes on the interactions between cosmology, physics, religion and ideology, and the public way in which these topics were discussed in the latter half of the nineteenth and the first years of the twentieth century.
Author : Boston Athenaeum
Publisher :
Page : 692 pages
File Size : 17,79 MB
Release : 1878
Category : American literature
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