Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

      • Well known abroad but little known in England at the time, he was professor of Psychology at the University of Strasbourg and founder of a school of ‘morbid psychology’.
      www.taylorfrancis.com/books/mono/10.4324/9781315814438/troubled-conscience-insane-mind-psychology-revivals-charles-blondel
  1. People also ask

  2. Jun 1, 1997 · Charles Blondel, the great French psychiatrist, psychologist and philosopher was born in Lyon on 10 October 1876 and died on 19 February 1939 after a surgical intervention.’ A normalien (1897-1900), he was to become agreg6 and fellow of the Thiers foundation in 1901.2 He became a doctor in medicine in 1906 at the University of Paris with a ...

  3. Jul 9, 2014 · Originally published in 1928 in the Psyche Miniatures Medical Series, this title was an attempt to bring to the attention of British psychologists and psychiatrists some aspects of the work and thought of French psychologist Charles Blondel.

    • 1st Edition
  4. Feb 20, 2024 · Blondel’s answer could seem disingenuous to a scientifically-minded reader. According to him, we can validly attain knowledge about the historical figure of Jesus through the Christian tradition, understood as the practice of the faith in the Christian community throughout the centuries.

  5. Jul 25, 2016 · 'Charles Blondel (Promotion 1901) (1876-1939)', Annuaire de la Fondation Thiers, 1939-1940 (Paris: H. Gaignault et Fils), 27-32. Google Scholar

    • G E Berrios, F Fuentenebro
    • 1997
  6. Blondel attacks the sterility of critical philosophy, the apogee of the Enlightenment, for having closed off questions rather than answering them, for demanding God to show Himself and to be judged by man. Blondel locates the fundamental error in the lack of attention to the phenomenon of action.

  7. Dec 4, 2017 · ABSTRACT. When Maurice Blondel raised the problem of Christian salvation in his thesis ‘L’Action’, he met with heavy resistance, both from the French University, striving for rationality and from the traditional Catholic philosophers who rejected the ‘modern’ method of immanence.

  8. Originally published in 1928 in the Psyche Miniatures Medical Series, this title was an attempt to bring to the attention of British psychologists and psychiatrists some aspects of the work and thought of French psychologist Charles Blondel.