This article addresses the affinities between Henri Bergson's philosophy and Thomas Hardy's poetry. Both draw upon Charles Darwin's theories of natural science : Hardy was greatly influenced by them, whereas Bergson transmuted Darwinism as his élan vital stands in deliberate contrast with Darwin's materialism. Although the French philosopher fascinated the poet (in a letter to Saleeby, he wrote : « You will see how much I want to be a Bergsonian »), he recognized that Bergson's « dualism » was totally incongruous with the incorrigibly plural post-Darwin world that Hardy's Weltanschauung embraced. Both Darwin and Bergson helped Hardy articulate his complex response to the loss of religion, and influenced some of his most compassionate, spiri...
Henri Bergson a peut-être été, parmi les philosophes, celui qui, au Collège de France, a le plus con...
The present article attempts to analyze and compare the views of Charles Darwin and Michel Foucault ...
Marx and Engels thought that they had found the historié al and natural foundation of their politica...
The paper focuses on the importance of Darwin’s work for the shaping of Henri Bergson’s philosophy, ...
la critique bergsonienne du darwinisme rencontre le soutien de la génétique contemporaineBergson who...
In 1912, Julian Huxley published his first book The Individual in the Animal Kingdom which he dedica...
The influence of Darwinism and evolutionism on Hardy’s work needs no further demonstration. Yet when...
The opening paragraphs of the short story The Fiddler of the Reels contrast past and present, Wessex...
Thomas Hardy was deeply influenced by his discovery of The Origin of Species when he was nineteen an...
For differing reasons both Bergson and Simondon may be called philosophers of becoming. Our aim in t...
This article compares the open-ended Darwinism of Charles Darwin, George Lewes, George Eliot and Tho...
The thesis examines the principal works of Charles Darwin to determine whether there is any evidence...
This study of the influence of Charles Darwin on Thomas Hardy\u27s tragic novels centers on two key ...
Henri Bergson (1859–1940), the most prominent member of nineteenth-century French spiritualism, is t...
CALEB SALEEBY wrote to Hardy in 1914 to ask whether he was correct in observing the similarity of hi...
Henri Bergson a peut-être été, parmi les philosophes, celui qui, au Collège de France, a le plus con...
The present article attempts to analyze and compare the views of Charles Darwin and Michel Foucault ...
Marx and Engels thought that they had found the historié al and natural foundation of their politica...
The paper focuses on the importance of Darwin’s work for the shaping of Henri Bergson’s philosophy, ...
la critique bergsonienne du darwinisme rencontre le soutien de la génétique contemporaineBergson who...
In 1912, Julian Huxley published his first book The Individual in the Animal Kingdom which he dedica...
The influence of Darwinism and evolutionism on Hardy’s work needs no further demonstration. Yet when...
The opening paragraphs of the short story The Fiddler of the Reels contrast past and present, Wessex...
Thomas Hardy was deeply influenced by his discovery of The Origin of Species when he was nineteen an...
For differing reasons both Bergson and Simondon may be called philosophers of becoming. Our aim in t...
This article compares the open-ended Darwinism of Charles Darwin, George Lewes, George Eliot and Tho...
The thesis examines the principal works of Charles Darwin to determine whether there is any evidence...
This study of the influence of Charles Darwin on Thomas Hardy\u27s tragic novels centers on two key ...
Henri Bergson (1859–1940), the most prominent member of nineteenth-century French spiritualism, is t...
CALEB SALEEBY wrote to Hardy in 1914 to ask whether he was correct in observing the similarity of hi...
Henri Bergson a peut-être été, parmi les philosophes, celui qui, au Collège de France, a le plus con...
The present article attempts to analyze and compare the views of Charles Darwin and Michel Foucault ...
Marx and Engels thought that they had found the historié al and natural foundation of their politica...