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La felicit? di una donna ?milie du Ch?telet tra Voltaire e Newton

Libri antichi e moderni
Bartoli, Silvana
Olschki, 2017
25,00 €
(Arezzo, Italia)
Chiusi per ferie fino al 25 Novembre 2026.

Metodi di Pagamento

Dettagli

  • Anno di pubblicazione
  • 2017
  • ISBN
  • 9788822265463
  • Autore
  • Bartoli, Silvana
  • Editori
  • Olschki
  • Soggetto
  • Storia 1700 - 1900, Cultura francese
  • Descrizione
  • brossura
  • Sovracoperta
  • False
  • Stato di conservazione
  • Nuovo
  • Lingue
  • Italiano
  • Legatura
  • Brossura

Descrizione

cm 17 x 24, 252 pp. Biblioteca dell'?Archivum Romanicum?. Serie I: Storia, Letteratura, Paleografia 479 ?L?amore per lo studio ? la passione pi? necessaria alla nostra felicit?; ? una risorsa sicura contro le disgrazie e una fonte inesauribile di gratificazione?: l?autoritratto di ?milie du Ch?telet sta nella cornice di queste parole. Accanto a Voltaire insegu? il desiderio di capire il mondo e divenne la pi? celebre donna di scienza del secolo XVIII. Ma ?milie nutriva soprattutto l?ambizione di essere ricordata: ? l?oblio la morte peggiore. ?A love for studying is the passion most essential for our happiness; it is a sure resource against misfortunes and an inexhaustible source of gratification?: the self-portrait of ?milie du Ch?telet is outlined by these words. Alongside Voltaire, she pursued her desire to understand the world and became the most famous woman of science of the eighteenth century. But ?milie?s main ambition was to be remembered, for oblivion is the worst kind of death.?A love for studying is the passion most essential for our happiness; it is a sure resource against misfortunes and an inexhaustible source of gratification?: the self-portrait of ?milie du Ch?telet is outlined by these words. Alongside Voltaire, she pursued her desire to understand the world and became the most famous woman of science of the eighteenth century. But ?milie?s main ambition was to be remembered, for oblivion is the worst kind of death.?A love for studying is the passion most essential for our happiness; it is a sure resource against misfortunes and an inexhaustible source of gratification?: the self-portrait of ?milie du Ch?telet is outlined by these words. Alongside Voltaire, she pursued her desire to understand the world and became the most famous woman of science of the eighteenth century. But ?milie?s main ambition was to be remembered, for oblivion is the worst kind of death.?A love for studying is the passion most essential for our happiness; it is a sure resource against misfortunes and an inexhaustible source of gratification?: the self-portrait of ?milie du Ch?telet is outlined by these words. Alongside Voltaire, she pursued her desire to understand the world and became the most famous woman of science of the eighteenth century. But ?milie?s main ambition was to be remembered, for oblivion is the worst kind of death.?A love for studying is the passion most essential for our happiness; it is a sure resource against misfortunes and an inexhaustible source of gratification?: the self-portrait of ?milie du Ch?telet is outlined by these words. Alongside Voltaire, she pursued her desire to understand the world and became the most famous woman of science of the eighteenth century. But ?milie?s main ambition was to be remembered, for oblivion is the worst kind of death.?A love for studying is the passion most essential for our happiness; it is a sure resource against misfortunes and an inexhaustible source of gratification?: the self-portrait of ?milie du Ch?telet is outlined by these words. Alongside Voltaire, she pursued her desire to understand the world and became the most famous woman of science of the eighteenth century. But ?milie?s main ambition was to be remembered, for oblivion is the worst kind of death.?A love for studying is the passion most essential for our happiness; it is a sure resource against misfortunes and an inexhaustible source of gratification?: the self-portrait of ?milie du Ch?telet is outlined by these words. Alongside Voltaire, she pursued her desire to understand the world and became the most famous woman of science of the eighteenth century. But ?milie?s main ambition was to be remembered, for oblivion is the worst kind of death.?A love for studying is the passion most essential for our happiness; it is a sure resource against misfortunes and an inexhaustible source of gratification?: the self-portrait of ?milie du Ch?telet is outlined by these words. Alongside Voltaire, she pursued her desire to u

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