Europe and the Mediterranean economy
In: Routledge studies in the European economy 25
4883 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Routledge studies in the European economy 25
In: Revue internationale de la Croix-Rouge et Bulletin international des sociétés de la Croix-Rouge, Band 11, Heft 123, S. 169
ISSN: 1607-5889
In: The European journal of the history of economic thought, Band 27, Heft 2, S. 339-341
ISSN: 1469-5936
In: Collection Droit
In: Sciences économiques
In: Publications of the Social Sciences Centre, Athens, 4
In: The annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, Band 1, Heft 4, S. 680-681
ISSN: 1552-3349
Texte paru en français et en anglais. ; François-Vincent Raspail (1794–1878) was one of the leading Republican heroes of nineteenth-century France. His political involvement began just after the 1830 Revolution; he played a prominent role in the Société des amis du peuple, then in the Société des droits de l'homme. During the 1830s he spent many months in Louis-Philippe's jails. But Raspail was also a chemist and a physiologist who in 1833 published an important New Treatise on Organic Chemistry in which he put forward major advances in cell theory and the development of life. Simultaneously he founded a political newspaper, Le Réformateur, in which, in 1834–1835, he presented his plan for a general social and political reform in weekly installments. He wrote about thirteen articles "On Economic Science." I present in this paper an analysis of this completely unknown set of articles and underline the intellectual and conceptual transfers between chemistry, politics and economics in Raspail's thought around 1830.
BASE
Texte paru en français et en anglais. ; François-Vincent Raspail (1794–1878) was one of the leading Republican heroes of nineteenth-century France. His political involvement began just after the 1830 Revolution; he played a prominent role in the Société des amis du peuple, then in the Société des droits de l'homme. During the 1830s he spent many months in Louis-Philippe's jails. But Raspail was also a chemist and a physiologist who in 1833 published an important New Treatise on Organic Chemistry in which he put forward major advances in cell theory and the development of life. Simultaneously he founded a political newspaper, Le Réformateur, in which, in 1834–1835, he presented his plan for a general social and political reform in weekly installments. He wrote about thirteen articles "On Economic Science." I present in this paper an analysis of this completely unknown set of articles and underline the intellectual and conceptual transfers between chemistry, politics and economics in Raspail's thought around 1830.
BASE
Texte paru en français et en anglais. ; François-Vincent Raspail (1794–1878) was one of the leading Republican heroes of nineteenth-century France. His political involvement began just after the 1830 Revolution; he played a prominent role in the Société des amis du peuple, then in the Société des droits de l'homme. During the 1830s he spent many months in Louis-Philippe's jails. But Raspail was also a chemist and a physiologist who in 1833 published an important New Treatise on Organic Chemistry in which he put forward major advances in cell theory and the development of life. Simultaneously he founded a political newspaper, Le Réformateur, in which, in 1834–1835, he presented his plan for a general social and political reform in weekly installments. He wrote about thirteen articles "On Economic Science." I present in this paper an analysis of this completely unknown set of articles and underline the intellectual and conceptual transfers between chemistry, politics and economics in Raspail's thought around 1830.
BASE
Texte paru en français et en anglais. ; François-Vincent Raspail (1794–1878) was one of the leading Republican heroes of nineteenth-century France. His political involvement began just after the 1830 Revolution; he played a prominent role in the Société des amis du peuple, then in the Société des droits de l'homme. During the 1830s he spent many months in Louis-Philippe's jails. But Raspail was also a chemist and a physiologist who in 1833 published an important New Treatise on Organic Chemistry in which he put forward major advances in cell theory and the development of life. Simultaneously he founded a political newspaper, Le Réformateur, in which, in 1834–1835, he presented his plan for a general social and political reform in weekly installments. He wrote about thirteen articles "On Economic Science." I present in this paper an analysis of this completely unknown set of articles and underline the intellectual and conceptual transfers between chemistry, politics and economics in Raspail's thought around 1830.
BASE
François-Vincent Raspail (1794–1878) was one of the leading Republican heroes of nineteenth-century France. His political involvement began just after the 1830 Revolution; he played a prominent role in the Société des amis du peuple, then in the Société des droits de l'homme. During the 1830s he spent many months in Louis-Philippe's jails. But Raspail was also a chemist and a physiologist who in 1833 published an important New Treatise on Organic Chemistry in which he put forward major advances in cell theory and the development of life. Simultaneously he founded a political newspaper, Le Réformateur, in which, in 1834–1835, he presented his plan for a general social and political reform in weekly installments. He wrote about thirteen articles "On Economic Science." I present in this paper an analysis of this completely unknown set of articles and underline the intellectual and conceptual transfers between chemistry, politics and economics in Raspail's thought around 1830. ; Texte paru en français et en anglais.
BASE
In: Burt Franklin bibliography & reference series 207