The Revolution of 1848, according to Fourierist Social Science
Denis Burckel
|
1999 / n° 10 |
décembre 1999
Abstract
Fourierism, seen as a physiology of the social body in relation with the scientific theories of the beginning of the 19th century, can be seen as a School collecting and spreading knowledge, and - in fact - not as a party seeking for power. Therefore, the Revolution of 1848 and the Second Republic are subjects of scientific analyse ; they belong to the natural history of manhood and universe. Further, the fourierists challenge the concepts of progress and of utopia.
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Index
Lieux :
Europe
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Lyon, Rhône
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Nord
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Paris, Seine
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Vendée
Notions :
Anatomie
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Médecine
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Physiologie
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Politique
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Science sociale
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Sciences
Personnes :
Arago, François
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Baudet-Dulary, Alexandre
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Bernardin de Saint-Pierre, Henri
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Bichat, Xavier
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Bonnard (de), Arthur
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Breton, Philippe
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Briancourt, Mathieu
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Cantagrel, François
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Considerant, Victor
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Cuvier, Georges
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Dameth, Henri
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Fontarive, L.
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Foucault, Michel
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Geoffroy-Saint-Hilaire, Etienne
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Harel, Charles
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Hennequin, Victor
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Jésus Christ
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Lamarck, Jean-Baptiste
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Lefébure, Henri
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Léonard, Jacques
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Leray, Constant
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Orina
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Paget, Amédée
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Pompéry (de), Edouard
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Rignol, Loïc
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Riot-Sarcey, Michèle
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Robespierre, Maximilien de
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Staël, Germaine de
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Tamisier, Alphonse
Pour citer ce document
BURCKEL Denis
, « The Revolution of 1848, according to Fourierist Social Science »,
Cahiers Charles Fourier
, 1999 / n° 10
, en ligne :
http://www.charlesfourier.fr/spip.php?article177 (consulté le 5 juillet 2022).
Denis Burckel
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