• Thumbnail for James Wood (encyclopaedist)
    James Wood (12 October 1820 – 17 March 1901) was a Scottish writer, editor, and Free Church minister. Born in Leith, Wood studied at the University of...
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  • James Wood (encyclopaedist) (1820–1901), British editor of The Nuttall Encyclopaedia James Wood, Lord Irwin (born 1977), British courtesy peer James Edward...
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  • percussionist, and conductor James Wood (critic) (born 1965), British literary critic and novelist James Wood (encyclopaedist) (1820–1901), British editor...
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  • Thumbnail for Thomas Jefferson
    364–365. Herring, 2008, p. 97. Wood, 2010, p. 638. Bernstein, 2003, p. 146. Wood, 2010, p. 639. Meacham, 2012, pp. 383–384. Wood, 2010, p. 368. Freehling,...
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  • 47–48. John Stuart Mill: critical assessments, Volume 4, By John Cunningham Wood Mill, J.S. (1869) The Subjection of Women Archived 29 April 2015 at the Wayback...
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  • Thumbnail for Immanuel Kant
    CPuR A211-15/B256-62 Guyer & Wood 1998, pp. 11–12. Guyer & Wood 1998, p. 12. Guyer & Wood 1998, pp. 12–13. Guyer & Wood 1998, p. 13. Kant, CPuR A5/B8...
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  • Thumbnail for Conrad Gessner
    Conrad Gessner was a Renaissance polymath, a physician, philosopher, encyclopaedist, bibliographer, philologist, natural historian and illustrator. In 1537...
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  • Thumbnail for Mayfly
    The brief lives of mayfly adults have been noted by naturalists and encyclopaedists since Aristotle and Pliny the Elder in classical antiquity. The German...
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  • aspects of harvesting wood and in return they gain access to international markets that prefer the consumption of certified wood. Today, 12 percent of...
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  • Thumbnail for Marian Marsh
    of four children of a German chocolate manufacturer and, as noted by encyclopaedist Leslie Halliwell in his book The Filmgoer's Companion, his French-English...
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  • Thumbnail for John Locke
    their iniquitous systems of servitude". According to American historian James Farr, Locke never expressed any thoughts about his contradictory opinions...
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  • Sterba, James (1980). Justice: Alternative Political Perspectives. Boston: Wadsworth Publishing Company. p. 175. ISBN 978-0534007621. Sterba, James (2013)...
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  • Thumbnail for Writer
    (1713–1784) is renowned for his contributions to the Encyclopédie. The encyclopaedist Bernardino de Sahagún (1499–1590) was a Franciscan whose Historia general...
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  • Thumbnail for John Stuart Mill
    Feminist and Philosopher". ThoughtCo. Retrieved 9 July 2019. Cunningham Wood, John. John Stuart Mill: Critical Assessments 4. Mill, John Stuart. [1869]...
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  • Thumbnail for Classical radicalism
    political sense is generally ascribed to the English parliamentarian Charles James Fox, a leader of the left wing of the Whig party who dissented from the...
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  • died. The minister responsible for economic and financial affairs, Charles Wood, expected that private enterprise and free trade, rather than government...
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  • Thumbnail for Adam Smith
    dispatched in the direction indicated, and they came upon the woman in Leslie wood. As soon as she saw them she threw her burden down and escaped, and the child...
    105 KB (12,357 words) - 17:35, 6 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Charles Bossut
    – 14 January 1814) was a French mathematician and confrère of the Encyclopaedists. Bossut was born in 1730 in Tartaras, Loire to Barthélemy Bossut and...
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  • 1910–1981), novelist Leonard G. G. Ramsey (1913–1990), writer, editor and encyclopaedist Thomas Randolph (1605–1635), poet William Brighty Rands (wrote as Henry...
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  • Thumbnail for Canonbury House and Canonbury Tower
    Newbery to live at Canonbury House in the 1750s. Ephraim Chambers, an encyclopaedist whose principal work was the Cyclopædia, or an Universal Dictionary...
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  • Thumbnail for Thomas Paine
    While in prison, he continued to work on The Age of Reason (1793–1794). James Monroe used his diplomatic connections to get Paine released in November...
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  • Thumbnail for Paleolibertarianism
    Randolph Club and the Mont Pelerin Society. "The Trump Phenomenon" The Tom Woods Show "Do You Have 'Trump Derangement Syndrome?' | Alan Colmes Radio Show"...
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  • Thumbnail for Abraham Rees
    Williams; Llewelyn Gwyn Chambers (1959). "Rees, Abraham (1743-1825), encyclopaedist". Dictionary of Welsh Biography. National Library of Wales. Retrieved...
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  • Thumbnail for City of London Cemetery and Crematorium
    engineer Alfred Horsley Hinton, a pictorialist photographer Robert Hunter (encyclopædist) Elwyn Jones, Baron Elwyn-Jones, a British barrister and Labour politician...
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  • Thumbnail for Montesquieu
    remained a powerful influence on many of the American founders, most notably James Madison of Virginia, the "Father of the Constitution". Montesquieu's philosophy...
    42 KB (5,031 words) - 23:10, 28 June 2024
  • Thumbnail for Alexis de Tocqueville
    more powerful because it does not resemble one", wrote The New Yorker's James Wood. Tocqueville worried that if despotism were to take root in a modern democracy...
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  • Thumbnail for Jeremy Bentham
    landowner, Earl Spencer. Other sites were considered, including one at Hanging Wood, near Woolwich, but all proved unsatisfactory. Eventually Bentham turned...
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  • instrumental in the spread of waterborne diseases. In his De Medicina, the encyclopaedist Celsus warned that public bathing could induce gangrene in unhealed...
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  • Archived from the original on 26 May 2020. Retrieved 31 July 2019. Sterba, James P. (October 1994). "From Liberty to Welfare". Ethics. Cambridge: Blackwell...
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  • theologian, medical doctor, and poet 1327 – Cecco d'Ascoli, Italian encyclopaedist, physician and poet (b. 1257) 1328 – Ibn Taymiya, Islamic scholar and...
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