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2016
Auguste Comte (b. 1798–d. 1857), mathematician, philosopher of science, grand systematizer of positivism, and in later years founder and High Priest of the Church of Humanity, coined the term sociology, a branch of knowledge he claimed to have established as a positive science.
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Auguste Comte (b. 1798–d. 1857), mathematician, philosopher of science, grand systematizer of positivism, and in later years founder and High Priest of the Church of Humanity, coined the term sociology, a branch of knowledge he claimed to have established as a positive science.
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1993
This volume continues to explore the life and works of Auguste Comte during his so-called second career. It covers the period from the coup d'état of Louis Napoleon in late 1851 to Comte's death in 1857. During these early years of the Second Empire, Comte became increasingly conservative and anxious to control his disciples.
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This volume continues to explore the life and works of Auguste Comte during his so-called second career. It covers the period from the coup d'état of Louis Napoleon in late 1851 to Comte's death in 1857. During these early years of the Second Empire, Comte became increasingly conservative and anxious to control his disciples.
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Rocky Mountain Review of Language and Literature, 1984
James P. Gilroy, Arline Reilein Standley
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James P. Gilroy, Arline Reilein Standley
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2009
Auguste Comte (1798-1857), the founder of positivism, stood at the junction of two important traditions in European thought. One was what we might call an ‘encyclopaedic’ tradition, which aimed at the systematization of knowledge and the construction of a scientific understanding of society.
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Auguste Comte (1798-1857), the founder of positivism, stood at the junction of two important traditions in European thought. One was what we might call an ‘encyclopaedic’ tradition, which aimed at the systematization of knowledge and the construction of a scientific understanding of society.
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