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  1. Clotilde de Vaux (Parigi, 3 aprile 1815 – Parigi, 5 aprile 1846) è stata una scrittrice e poetessa francese. È nota per aver ispirato quella parte della filosofia di Auguste Comte che va sotto il nome di "Religione Positivista" o "Religione dell'Umanità" [1] .

  2. Clotilde de Vaux, born Clotilde Marie (April 3, 1815 in Paris – April 5, 1846 in Paris), was a French intellectual known to have inspired the French philosopher Auguste Comte's Religion of Humanity.

  3. Clotilde de Vaux née Charlotte Clotilde Joséphine Marie [1] à Paris le 3 avril 1815 et morte le 5 avril 1846 dans la même ville, inspira à Auguste Comte la « religion de l'Humanité ».

  4. Le but de ce travail en trois parties est de tenter de saisir la pensée et les attitudes de Clotilde de Vaux en scrutant attentivement sa correspondance et ses maigres entreprises littéraires, en y intégrant une lecture critique des lettres d’Auguste Comte et de ses témoignages.

  5. In late 1844, Comte met Clotilde de Vaux, the woman to whom he later attributed his emotional development and most important ideas. His disciples and most historians have generally accepted his judgment about the impact she had on his evolution.

    • Mary Pickering
    • 2009
  6. Clotilde de Vaux has a different personality due to the involvement of aspects of many rich and diverse images made available by the culture at large. She played the abandoned wife, innocent victim, household angel, inspiring muse, and dependent invalid just to conform to bourgeois convention.

  7. French writer and muse of Auguste Comte. Born in Paris on April 3, 1815; died of tuberculosis in Paris on April 5, 1846; first child of Captain Joseph Marie and Countess Henriette-Josephine de Ficquelmont; educated at home by her mother; married Amenee de Vaux; beloved by philosopher Auguste Comte.