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Herbert Spencer and Scientific Education
Cód:
491_9781473309241
This early work by Gabriel Compayré was originally published in 1906 and we are now republishing it. Herbert Spencer and Scientific Education is a work that details Spencers advancement of education and outlines his remarkable contribution to the reform and progress of the instruction of humanity. Herbert Spencer was born on 27th April 1820, in Derby, England. In 1851 he published Social Statics to great acclaim and his quietly influential Principles of Psychology in 1955. These were followed by numerous works of sociology, psychology, and philosophy, which led him to become a prominent intellectual of his day. He also wrote The Developmental Hypothesis (1852) which described the theory of evolution seven years before Charles Darwins Origin of Species. He even popularised the term Evolution and coined the phrase Survival of the fittest, but his works did not contain the comprehensive theoretical system that Darwins did, which is why his theory was not taken seriously at the time. Spencers most famous idea was that of Social Darwinism. He saw the process of organic evolution as being analogous to that of society, an idea influenced many intellectuals of the day.
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