From the beginning of the early modern period encyclopaedias gradually began to be organized differently in terms of their contents and their arrangement. In the 18th century many encyclopedic works were created and their format was gradually changing. This article represents a brief glimpse at the issue of the birth and function of encyclopedic works in the way they were approached by Ephraim Chambers in the Cyclopaedia (1728) and Denis Diderot in the Encyclopédie (1751). On their opinions on ordering of knowledge we can trace the shift, which is reflected in the differences of their understanding of the organization of knowledge, in their motivation and other factors
One of the most interesting aspects with respect to which we measure the modernity of an era is its ...
On July 1, 1751, the royal Parisian printer Le Breton published the first volume of the Encyclopédie...
International audienceThe paper analyses issues of legal classification during the Age of the Enligh...
The Renaissance has long been associated with ‘encyclopedism’ primarily for two different reasons wh...
Georges Benrekassa : From the Encyclopédie to Modern Encyclopœdias : Presenting and Communicating th...
The article evaluates the encyclopaedic adventure of the second half of the XVIII century, and the c...
As editors of the Encyclopédie, Diderot and D'Alembert claimed that one of the work's greatest stren...
The aim of applying new technical and scientific discoveries to benefit mankind is the main purpose ...
As editors of the Encyclopédie, Diderot and D'Alembert claimed that one of the work's greatest stre...
Kathleen H. Doig: The Encyclopédie Méthodique and the Organization of Knowledge. The alphabetical a...
General encyclopedias illuminate the culture of an era; yet, except for the first edition of the Enc...
Walter Tega : The " Folly " of Alphabetical Order and the " Linking " of Science. The Encyclopédie a...
The last of the great Enlightenment encyclopedias, Charles Joseph Panckoucke’s Encyclopédie méthodiq...
Although the Encyclopédie is one of the landmarks of eighteenth-century thought and one of the most ...
On July 1, 1751, the royal Parisian printer Le Breton published the first volume of the Encyclopédie...
One of the most interesting aspects with respect to which we measure the modernity of an era is its ...
On July 1, 1751, the royal Parisian printer Le Breton published the first volume of the Encyclopédie...
International audienceThe paper analyses issues of legal classification during the Age of the Enligh...
The Renaissance has long been associated with ‘encyclopedism’ primarily for two different reasons wh...
Georges Benrekassa : From the Encyclopédie to Modern Encyclopœdias : Presenting and Communicating th...
The article evaluates the encyclopaedic adventure of the second half of the XVIII century, and the c...
As editors of the Encyclopédie, Diderot and D'Alembert claimed that one of the work's greatest stren...
The aim of applying new technical and scientific discoveries to benefit mankind is the main purpose ...
As editors of the Encyclopédie, Diderot and D'Alembert claimed that one of the work's greatest stre...
Kathleen H. Doig: The Encyclopédie Méthodique and the Organization of Knowledge. The alphabetical a...
General encyclopedias illuminate the culture of an era; yet, except for the first edition of the Enc...
Walter Tega : The " Folly " of Alphabetical Order and the " Linking " of Science. The Encyclopédie a...
The last of the great Enlightenment encyclopedias, Charles Joseph Panckoucke’s Encyclopédie méthodiq...
Although the Encyclopédie is one of the landmarks of eighteenth-century thought and one of the most ...
On July 1, 1751, the royal Parisian printer Le Breton published the first volume of the Encyclopédie...
One of the most interesting aspects with respect to which we measure the modernity of an era is its ...
On July 1, 1751, the royal Parisian printer Le Breton published the first volume of the Encyclopédie...
International audienceThe paper analyses issues of legal classification during the Age of the Enligh...