skip to main content
MetaFilter
AskMeFi
Projects
Music
Jobs
Podcast
IRL
Chat
MetaTalk
Home
FAQ
About
Archives
Tags
Popular
Best Of
Random
Login
New User
6 posts tagged with Voltaire. (
View popular tags
)
Displaying 1 through 6 of 6. Subscribe:
Users that often use this tag:
Kattullus
(2)
Bibliographia
Today Cambridge University offered a
complete free digital archive of the personal papers of Sir Isaac Newton
, including the
Principa Mathematica
and
his first published research paper
. The archives join a number of efforts to open original works of scientific greatness to the world:
Charles Darwin's entire personal library, complete with annotations and handwritten marginalia, digitized, indexed, and searchable
, part of the
Biodiversity Heritage Library
(
previously
)
Mapping The Republic of Letters
and
Electronic Enlightenment
, wonderful sites showing the communication and social connections of Enlightenment writers.
Newton's original works are handily supplemented by
The Newton Project
, showing the man's insertions and deletions to his own work.
posted by
Bora Horza Gobuchul
on Dec 12, 2011 -
10 comments
Mapping the Republic of Letters
Mapping the Republic of Letters
is a cartographic tool designed by students and professors at Stanford that seeks to represent the Enlightenment era Republic of Letters, the network of correspondence between the finest thinkers of the day, such as Voltaire, Leibniz, Rousseau, Newton, Diderot, Linnaeus, Franklin and countless others. Patricia Cohen wrote
an article about Mapping the Republic of Letters as well as other datamining digital humanities projects
in The New York Times. The mapping tool is fun to play with but I recommend you read the blogpost where Cohen
explains how to use Mapping the Republic of Letters
.
posted by
Kattullus
on Nov 16, 2010 -
15 comments
Candide, ou l'Optimisme
Few books written in the 18th Century are better known or more read today than Candide, Voltaire's great satire of optimism. The New York Public Library's
Candide exhibition
has many delights, including
Rockwell Kent's famous illustrations
. Many other artists have illustrated Candide, and many of those images can be seen in the University Library of Trier's
Candide image database
. If your eyes are tired, you can also download an
audiobook of Candide
for free from LibriVox, or you can listen to a
lecture on Candide
[iTunes]
by Stanford professor Martin Evans. Adam Gopnik explains
how Candide fits in Voltaire's life
and what it can teach us today. And don't miss
this old post about Leonard Bernstein's Candide operetta
.
posted by
Kattullus
on Jan 26, 2010 -
10 comments
"The Categorical Dictionary of the Sciences, Arts and Industries"
The University of Michigan's
collaborative translation
of
Diderot
and
d'Alembert's
Encylopédie
has completed some 650 selections from the Enlightenment keystone, including articles on
California
,
vanilla
,
werewolves
,
the English language,
beauty
, and
the complete structure
of human knowledge
.
[
more inside
]
posted by
Iridic
on Sep 1, 2009 -
7 comments
Aphorisms - James Geary Books
Aphorisms: "A minimum of sound to a maximum of sense."
[ram]
Journalist,
gnomologist
and author
James Geary
has just released
Geary's Guide to the World's Great Aphorists
[Amazon.
recent NPR interview here
]
. It draws from such aphorists as
Shakespeare
,
Voltaire
,
Emerson
,
Shaw
,
Mae West
,
Woody Allen
and
Steven Wright
. Also discussed is
chiasmus
, the
Jefferson Bible
and some
meta
. As Ralph Waldo Emerson
said
, "Make your own Bible. Select and collect all the words and sentences that in your reading have been like the blast of triumph..."
[
more inside
]
posted by
McLir
on Oct 2, 2007 -
16 comments
Genius Without a Beard
The scientist whom history forgot
:
Emilie du Châtelet
.
Lover
of
Voltaire
,
genius without a beard
,
female
scientist
,
mathematician
and
philosopher
.
posted by
MetaMonkey
on Aug 3, 2006 -
10 comments
Page:
1