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History of Europe, : from the Fall of Napoleon in MDCCCXV to the accession of Louis Napoleon in MDCCCLII
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Year: 1852 Publisher: Edinburgh : Blackwood,

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History, Modern --- Europe --- History


Book
Course of the history of modern philosophy.
Authors: ---
Year: 1852 Publisher: New York : D Appleton & Company,

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"M. Cousin's Course of the history of modern philosophy is here, for the first time entire, presented to the English reader. It consists of Lectures delivered at Paris in the years 1828-9. This second series of Lectures contains a full exposition of Cousin's system. It is, in fact, his great philosophical work, and has received his last revision and correction. Whoever, either for the purpose of propagating it or resisting its influence, wishes to make himself acquainted with Eclecticism, which is fast becoming the dominant philosophy of the nineteenth century, will do well to study this production of its founder and ablest teacher. The first volume contains a luminous summary of Cousin's views in regard to humanity and history. The connected account of the second volume gives of the history of philosophy from the earliest times; the distinct classification it makes of systems; the brief, yet intelligible, glimpses it affords into the interior of almost every school, whether ancient or modern, together with the detailed analysis of Locke".


Book
Course of the history of modern philosophy.
Authors: ---
Year: 1852 Publisher: New York : D Appleton & Company,

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"This is the second volume of M. Cousin's "Course of the History of Modern Philosophy." The first volume (see record 2008-07477-000) contains a summary of Cousin's views in regard to humanity and history. The course which comprises the last two volumes of this series gives the history of philosophy from the earliest times; the distinct classification it makes of systems; the brief, yet intelligible, glimpses it affords into the interior of every school, whether ancient or modern, together with the detailed analysis of Locke: in a word, the singular union of the more sober criticism of the psychological school, with occasional flights into the higher regions of metaphysical analysis, all concur."

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