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Rather, following Kant in The Critique of Pure Reason, Hegel's usage harks back to the Greek eidos, Plato's concept of form that is fully existent and universal: [138] "Hegel's Idee (like Plato's idea) is the product of an attempt to fuse ontology, epistemology, evaluation, etc., into a single set of concepts." [139]
1831 – Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel died of a gastrointestinal disease during a cholera outbreak in Berlin. 1832 - Johann Wolfgang von Goethe died of a heart attack in Weimar. [6] 1837 – Giacomo Leopardi died in Naples during a cholera epidemic, maybe by pulmonary edema. 1860 – Arthur Schopenhauer died of pulmonary-respiratory failure
Between January 2023 and 13 February 2023, there were 122 reported cases of cholera in Zambia, with two deaths. [121] During the same time period there were 122 cases reported in Burundi, with one death. [121] In the first quarter of 2023, South Africa announced 21 cholera deaths, with 170 people admitted to a Hammanskraal hospital. [127]
The text was originally published in 1837 by the editor Eduard Gans, six years after Hegel's death, utilizing Hegel's own lecture notes as well as those found that were written by his students. A second German edition was compiled by Hegel's son, Karl, in 1840. A third German edition, edited by Georg Lasson, was published in 1917.
John Snow theorized in the late 1840s that cholera was transmitted through water in an essay titled On the Mode of Communication of Cholera. [34] He specifically believed that it was the contamination of water which spread cholera. At the time, London's sewage system was rudimentary with unmaintained cesspools and the dumping of waste into the ...
Pages in category "Deaths from cholera" ... Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel; Thomas Augustine Hendrick; George Hodson (priest) Hon'inbō Shūsaku; Hossein Ali Mirza;
The disease continued westward in 1892, across the Punjab (with 75,000 cholera deaths), and raged on through Afghanistan and claimed 60,000 lives in Persia, [17] [18] and then reached Imperial Russia which suffered a staggering morbidity rate, exacerbated by the Russian famine of 1891–1892. [19]
In 2001–2004, Mugahid Abdulmonem Mugahid, a relatively unnotable Egyptian scholar, published for the first-time an Arabic translation of the lectures based on Sanderson's translation. This edition was divided into a series of 9 volumes. [6] In 2014–2015, Abu Yaareb al-Marzouki published a critical Arabic translation of the lectures in two ...