Jean jacques rousseau died

Jacques Jacob Bronfenbrenner (1883-1953)

Jacques Bronfenbrenner

Jacques Jacob Bronfenbrenner was born in Cherson (Kherson), Ukraine, in 1883. From 1902 until 1906 he studied at the Imperial University of Odessa. He was a member of the Social Revolutionary Party and a follower of Leon Trotsky. In the abortive revolution of 1905, he was among the civilian population who supported the mutiny of the Imperial Black Sea Fleet that was immortalized by Sergei Eisenstein in the film Battleship Potemkin. Marked for arrest by the tsarist regime, Bronfenbrenner fled the Russian Empire and found a haven as a student at the Institut Pasteur in Paris (1907-1909).

While in Paris, he worked in the laboratories of Élie Metchnikoff (Ilya Ilich Mechnikov, 1845-1916), who won the Nobel Prize in 1908 for discovery of phagocytosis and with other Russian émigré scientists, notably Alexandre Besredka. Much of Bronfenbrenner’s early laboratory research was based on Besredka’s fundamental discoveries in antiviral therapies. It is worth noting that the French v

Quick Info

Born
8 December 1865
Versailles, France
Died
17 October 1963
Paris, France

Summary
Jacques Hadamard was a French mathematician whose most important result is the prime number theorem which he proved in 1896. This states that the number of primes < n tends to infinity as fast as n/log e n.

Biography

Jacques Hadamard's father, Amédée Hadamard, married Claire Marie Jeanne Picard on 6 June 1864. Amédée Hadamard, who was of a Jewish background, was a teacher who taught several subjects such as classics, grammar, history and geography while Jacques' mother taught piano giving private lessons in their home. At the time that Jacques was born Amédée was teaching at the Lycée Impérial in Versailles but the family moved to Paris when Jacques was three years old when his father took up a position at the Lycée Charlemagne.

This was an unfortunate time for a child to be growing up in Paris. The Franco-Prussian War which began on 19 July 1870 went badly for France and on 19 September 1870 the Prussians began a siege of Paris. This was a desperate time

Jean-Jacques Rousseau

Genevan philosopher, writer, and composer (1712–1778)

This article is about the philosopher. For the director, see Jean-Jacques Rousseau (director).

"Rousseau" redirects here. For other uses, see Rousseau (disambiguation).

Jean-Jacques Rousseau

Portrait by Maurice Quentin de La Tour, 1753

Born(1712-06-28)28 June 1712

Geneva, Republic of Geneva

Died2 July 1778(1778-07-02) (aged 66)

Ermenonville, Picardy, Kingdom of France

PartnerThérèse Levasseur (1745–1778)
EraAge of Enlightenment
(early modern philosophy)
RegionWestern philosophy
School

Main interests

Political philosophy, music, education, literature

Notable ideas

General will, amour de soi, amour-propre, moral simplicity of humanity, child-centered learning, civil religion, popular sovereignty, positive liberty, public opinion
Writing career
LanguageFrench
Genres
SubjectSocial change
Literary movementSentimentalism
Years activeFrom 1743
Notable worksThe Social Contract
Julie, or the New Heloise

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