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Definition: Comte from Merriam-Webster's Collegiate(R) Dictionary

Auguste Comte 1798–1857 in full Isidore-Auguste-Marie-François-Xavier Fr. sociologist & philos.


Comte, Auguste

From The Columbia Encyclopedia
(ōgüst' kôNt), 1798–1857, French philosopher, founder of the school of philosophy known as positivism , educated in Paris. From 1818 to 1824 he contributed to the publications of Saint-Simon, and the direction of much of Comte's future work may be attributed to this association. Comte was primarily a social reformer. His goal was a society in which individuals and nations could live in harmony and comfort. His system for achieving such a society is presented in his Cours de philosophie positive (1830–42; tr. The Course of Positive Philosophy , 1896 ed.). In this work Comte analyzes the relation of social evolution and the stages of science. He sees the intellectual development of man covered by what is called the Law of the Three Stages—theological, in which events were largely attributed to supernatural forces; metaphysical, in which natural phenomena are thought to result from fundamental energies or ideas; and positive, in which phenomena are explained by observation, hypotheses, …
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Full text Article Auguste Comte

From Great Thinkers A-Z
The French philosopher Auguste Comte is often neglected in histories of philosophy. Nevertheless, his influence over nineteenth-century thought and his foreshadowing of later intellectual movements assure him a place in the history of thought. Comte's central task was to develop a scientifically…
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Full text Article Comte, Auguste (1798-1857)

From Cambridge Dictionary of Sociology
A grand philosophical synthesizer who coined the term sociology , he was the first to attempt its establishment as a science. For Comte, society was a rule-governed order of reality, irreducible to the individuals who comprised it, and sociology was a fundamental branch of knowledge which, together…
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Full text Article Comte, Auguste

From The Penguin Dictionary of Sociology
Inventor of the term ‘sociology’, first publicly used in the fourth volume of his Positive Philosophy (1838), Comte was secretary to SAINT-SIMON , and there has long been a debate over the relative importance of these two writers for socialism and sociology. Comte thought that sociology was a…
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Full text Article Comte, Auguste

From Philip's Encyclopedia
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Auguste Comte (The Library of Congress)
Born in Montpellier, Auguste Comte abandoned the devout Catholicism and royalism of his family while in his teens. He entered the École Polytechnique in 1814 and proved himself a brilliant mathematician and scientist. Comte was expelled in 1816 for participating in a student rebellion. Remaining in…
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Full text Article Comte, Auguste (1798–1857),

From Cambridge Dictionary of Philosophy
French philosopher and sociologist, the founder of positivism. He was educated in Paris at l’École Polytechnique, where he briefly taught mathematics. He suffered from a mental illness that occasionally interrupted his work. In conformity with empiricism, Comte held that knowledge of the world…
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Full text Article Comte, Auguste (1798-1857)

From Encyclopedia of Philosophers on Religion
Comte was the son of parents who were deeply committed to their Roman Catholic faith at a postrevolutionary time when, because of its close links to the monarchy, Catholicism was under attack for supposedly being antipatriotic. The baptism, during which he was given the additional names of the…
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Full text Article AUGUSTE COMTE 1798–1857

From Big Ideas Simply Explained: The Philosophy Book
The French thinker Auguste Comte is noted for his theory of intellectual and social evolution, which divides human progress into three key stages. The earliest stage, the theological stage, represented by the medieval period in Europe, is characterized by belief in the supernatural. This gave way to…
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Full text Article MATHEMATICAL METHOD

From Gaither's Dictionary of Scientific Quotations
Scottish-American mathematician and educator The distinction between the mathematical method and the scientific is seen in the agonies of very young children to do what their teachers sometimes tell them is mathematics. Anyone who was subjected to elementary geometry when his infantile brain was as…
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Full text Article Auguste Comte (1798-1857) (oil on canvas)

From Bridgeman Images: The Bridgeman Art Library
Auguste Comte (1798-1857) (oil on canvas)
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